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G
NIVERSITY OF (CALIFORNIA.
GtlFT OF
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ORIGIN AND HISTORY
BOOKS OF THE BIBLE,
^t Canoniral ani ije ^pocrpjal,
PBBIONED TO SHOW
WHAT THB BIBLB 18 HOT, WHJLT XT IB, AITD HOV TO USE IT.
By prof. C. E. STOWE, D. D.
y
(TB SEf TRADDIT,)
lILiIiXJSJLBfeJLTED.
P17BIJ8HBD BT iTnSBTKTnTON OSTLT, BT
BAETFOBD PUBLISHING COMPANY,
HABTF03D, CONN.
J. D. DENISON, NEW YORK.
ZEIGLEB, MoCTJBDY A CO., PHILADELPHIA, PA. ; CINCINNATI, O. ;
AND BT. LOUIS, MO. J. A. STODDARD, CHICAGO, ILL.
1868.
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Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1867, hj
CALVIN E. STOWE,
in the ClerVs office of the District Court of the United States, for
District of Connecticut
Entered also at
Stationers' Hall, London, England.
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TO THOSE WHO WITH MB
^tlim im4 Uvt wn& int^ tkt §ihU
THB rOLLOVIKO PA0B8
A1(E AFFECTIONATELT INSCBIBED
3B9 the Itutbttit*
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ILLUSTRATIONS.
Portrait of the Author, -
Jerusalem prom Mount of Olives,
Convent of St. Catharine, Mount Sinai, ■
CiBSAREA, . • . •
Mount of Olives, - - - .
View of Bethlehem, -
Cave of Nativity, - - -
Vale and Citt of Nazareth, -
Bethany, - - - -
Lake of Tiberias, ...
Jews' Place of Wailing, -
The Holy Sepulchre, * . ,
Island of Patmos, - - .
Nine Fac-simile Illustrations op Ancient Manuscripts, let-
tered A, B, C, D, E, F, F, G, H, with their explanations, are in-
serted at the close of the third chapter.
to face Title Page.
- to face
page 57
u
« 72
«
« 115
it
« 209
«
« 215
u
« 220
«
•* 286
u
« 802
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« 879
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« 499
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((
« 469
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PKEFAOE.
The purpose ot this volume can best be shown by a familiar illus-
tration : I purchase several different parcels of real estate in the
city of Hartford, and wish to ascertain the validity of my title to
each one of the parcels. I take the deeds to the register's office and
there trace each one by itself through all the preceding purchasers
till I come to the title derived from the original proprietors. If there
is no break in this chain of documentary evidence the title is perfect.
So each one of the books of the New Testament must be traced
up to the Apostles, who only had authority to deliver inspired books
to the churdies. This is what the present volume professes to do. It
is a book of authorities and testimonies ; it is the tracing and verify-
ing of title deeds.
But there are some deeds in which the chain is broken before we
get to the original proprietors ; there are some which are forgeries
and were not given by the men whose names they bear ; and there
are others which were given by the persons whose names they bear,
but these persons bad no authority to make the sales. All such deeds
are invalid and confer no title.
These latter deeds represent the apocryphal books. It is proposed
to show that every one of the apocryphal books belongs to one of these
three classes, to wit: 1. They can not be traced to the apostles; 2.
Some of them are proved to be forgeries ; 3. And others, though gen-
uine, were written by persons who had not apostolic authority to give
inspired books to the churches.
In making our investigations we begin with the times of Jerome
and Augustin ; because all admit that since that period there have
been no changes in the canon, and no authority for any change.
Thus each individual book of the New Testament is shown to
stand on its own merits, its own evidence ; and there is a full ex-
posure of the groundlessness of the silly story so oflen repeated, that
certain men got together and voted what should be Bible, and what
should not, and that this is the authority on which we receive the
books of the Bible as of Divine origin.
This being a book of authobitiks and testimonies, as has
already been said, it must necessarily be, to a considerable extent,
made up of extracts from the original authors and witnerses. Tlie
works fi-om which these extracts are made^ are not accessible to the
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VI PREFACE.
people, or even to the minreters of the church, except in very few
cases, and therefore there is an absolute necessity for giving the ex-
tracts quite fully, if we would afford to our readers a fair opportunity
of making up their own judgment on sufficient grounds. To scholars
by profession I recommend the voluminous works of the Church
Fathers themselves, and the very copious and judicious selections from
them made in the large and elaborate treatises by Lardner and Kirch-
hofer. I have &ithfully endeavored to give a fair specimen of the
testimony. To give the whole of it and the arguments arising from
it, would be to niake ten volumes like Lardner instead of one, and
place the work entirely beyond the reach of those for whom I intend
it I have not given the strongest testimonies only, but fiiir speci-
mens of both the strongest and the weakest ; that the reader may
see exactly how the matter lies in*the original authorities to which I
appeal.
The extracts from the apocryphal books are also full and copious ;
for these books for the most part are wholly inaccessible to the public
generally, and without full extracts I should entirely fail of my object,
which is to put into the hands of the common reader ample means
of judging between the canonical and the apocryphal. Some of these
books are exceedingly interesting. They are the honest endeavors
of good Christian men, near the apostolic times ; and the manifest
difference between the apostolic writings and theirs, is just the differ-
ence between divine inspiration and the unassisted efforts of the hu-
man mind at that period and in that class of people. Others of these
books are mere fictions, contrived by men more remote from (he
apostolic period, who had withdrawn into caves and deserts, and who
thought that the way to serve God was to have nothing to do with
men. Their dreams and sleepy imaginings are just what we might
expect under such circumstances ; but how different from the practi-
cal common sense and energetic worldly activity of the New Testa-
ment !
The style of my book is plain, simple and colloquial, as the purpose '
in writing it required. . I hope it is neither barbarous nor un-grammat-
ical ; for though I make no claims to elegance, I have endeavored to
be correct, concise and intelligible.
A similar volume, of about the same size, on the Old Testament,
including discussions of some general topics, necessary to a complete
view of the whole subject, such as Inspiration, Miracles, the Laws
of Interpretation, etc, will be ready early next spring, if Providence
permit.
C. E. STOWE.
Apeil 1, 1867.
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CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
The common popxtlab objections to the Bible at
THE FBESEKT DAT — WHAT THE BiBLE IS NOT, WHAT
IT IS, AND HOW TO USE IT, - - - • 9-37
CHAPTER IL
The KIND OF EVIDENCE ON WHICH WE BECBIYE THE
SACRED BOOKS OF THE NeW TESTAMENT, - • 89-50
CHAPTER III.
Evidence on which we receive the present text op
THE New TfcSTAMKNT AS SUBSTANTIALLY CORRECT.
Description of the Anciknt Manuscripts of the
New Testament, with Fac-simile Illustrations, - 57-100
CHAPTER IV.
Brief Biographies of one hl^dred of the Ancient
Witnesses to the New Testament books, whose
testimony is most important, and much of it cited
IN this work, . - - - . 101-140
CHAPTER V.
Testimony for the historical books of the New
Testament, ...... 141-160
CHAPTER VL
The four Gospels separately examined, Matthew,
Mark, Luke and John, .... lGl-201
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X.
Vm CONTENTS.
CHAPTER VIL
The Apochtphal Gospels and fbaoments of Gos-
pels SUPPOSED TO BE LOST, .... 203-252
CHAPTER vm.
Modern substitutes poe the Gospel History — exam-
ination OF THE BlOGRAPHIKS OF JeSUS, BT StRAUSS,
Weisse, Gfroereb, Bruno Bauer, F. C. Baur, Re-
nan AND SCHENKEL, ..... 253-812
9
CHAPTER IX.
The Acts of thb Apostles and the Apocbtfhal
Acts, ....... 813-SS4
CHAPTER X.
The Foubthen Epistles of Paul, ... 335-389
CHAPTER XL
The Catholic Epistles and the Apocryphal Epis-
tles, - - - - . . . 391-467
CHAPTER XII.
The Revelaton of St. John and the Apocryphal
Revelations, .... -469-508
CHAPTER XIIT.
The Bible Prophets and the Classical Oracles-
contrasted, -....- 509-540
CHAPTER XIV.
The Apocryphal Books of the Old Testament and
the reasons for their exclusion from the Canon, 541-583
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CHAPTER FIRST.
THE GOHHON POPULAR OBJECTIONS TO THE BIBLE AT THE
PRESENT DAY. WHAT THE BIBLE IS NOT, WHAT IT IS,
AND HOW TO USE IT.
John, v. 39 ; zvii. 17, — Search the ScriptureB. Thy Word is truth.
The Lord Jesus, when talking with the unbelieving
Jews, says to them. Search the Scriptures^ and when
praying to his Heavenly Father, in behalf of his disci-
ples, he says. Sanctify them through thy truths thy
word is truth.
According to these two statements, the Lord Jesus
must have considered the Scriptures to be the very
best book in the world, both for believers and unbeliev-
ers, both for the regenerate and the unregenerate; he
must have regarded them as true ; he must have looked
upon the Bible as it then existed, and was afterwards
to be enlarged, as the best means of making men good
and noble and true ; and he must have thought, that
in order to derive benefit from it, men must search,
examine, and study it.
Many persons in our day seem to have quite a diflfer-
ent opinion of the Bible from that which the Lord
Jesus here expresses. A respectable old book enough
(they think) considering. the times in which its differ-
ent parts were written, but far behind the civilization
of the present day, and it has, on the whole, about as
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10 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
many bad things in it as good ones. Without showing
any disrespect to these men we may be permitted to
say, so far as personal character is concerned, intel-
lectual or moral, or so far as opportunity of knowledge
on this subject is concerned, their mere opinion in re-
gard to the Bible can not be considered, to say the
very least, any more worthy of our regard than that
of the Lord Jesus.
Let us bring this matter to the test of fact and com-
mon sense. These men say, that the Bible is no more
inspired than the writings of Homer and Shakespeare,
and other great men, whom God has fitted to be the
instructors of mankind. Well, then, let us try and
see. Let us for a while use Homer and Shakespeare
instead of the Bible, say night and morning, in our
family prayers — ^when we meet in the house of God
for his worship — ^in the hour of sickness and calamity
and distress — at funerals, when all our earthly hopes
are blighted, and we lay our dearest friends in the
grave — ^let us then, instead of reading the Bible,
take a few passages from Homer and Shakespeare.
How long do you think this would last, before we
should be glad to get back to our Bible again?
The old gross assaults on the Bible, of the Voltaire
and Paine school have now generally passed by, the
book is treated rather respectfully than otherwise by
its opponents, and the objections to it are founded
mainly on what it is not and what it does not profess
to be, rather than on what it is and what it does pro-
fess to be. And these objections for the most part are
entirely inappropriate, wholly aside from all the facts
of the Bible, and from all the claims which it makes
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WHAT THE BIBLE IS NOT, 11
for itself. They are just like objecting to a ship
because it is not adapted to moving on a railway, or
to a locomotive because it can not sail on the sea ;
like objecting to an iron foundry because it will not
make cloth, or to a cotton factory because it can
not manufacture iron. To meet such objections we
must consider what the Bible is not as well as what
it is, what it does Tiot claim to be, as well as what it
does claim to be.
I. The Bible is not an amulet, a charm, a fetish, a
thing which by its mere presence without any voluntary
agency exerted in connection with it, accomplishes its
purpose ; it is not to be used as the believers in witchcraft
use a horse-shoe, or the American Indian his medicine-
bag, or the superstitious Christian his relic or crucifix.
The Bible is not, neither does it claim to be, any-
thing of this kind. It is the principles of the Bible
which must be brought into contact with the soul,
which must be interwoven with the very texture of
our minds, which must be made a part of our moral
nature. This is the way and the only way in which it
promises to benefit us, in which it has done any good ;
and it does not operate by its mere presence like a
charm or relia
The thirsty man in the desert, when he comes to a
spring, must drink of it as well as find it, or he per-
ishes with thirst
Yet men sometimes say. The Bible does no good ;
here it has been in the world thousands of years ; and
the worid is still full of sin and misery, just as it
always has been.
In the midst of Christian churches where the Bible
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12 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
is read every day, there are the dishonest, the licen-
tious, the blood-thh^ty, and the villainous. True, but
are these dishonest, licentious, blood-thirsty, villainous
people, in Christian communities, the men who love
and read the Bible — or the reverse ? Which are the
families generally that rear the industrious, frugal,
intelligent, useful citizens ; the families that despise and
neglect the Bible, or the families that revere and study
it ? Are the men generally who neither believe nor
love the Bible, who neither regard nor study it, better
men than their neighbors, who believe, love and obey
the Bible ? Is the Bible generally a favorite book in
grog-shops and gambling houses and brothels ? Is it
a book which cheats and swindlers and rogues espe-
cially love to study ?
Let us look at this matter in the light of common
honesty and common sense. A plague is raging in a
city, and a benevolent physician discovers a remedy,
which, if taken according to the prescription, infalli-
bly cures ; all who take it and follow the prescriptions
escape death from the plague. But some refuse to
take the medicine ; others take it and do not follow
the prescriptions, and these sicken and die. Now,
says the objector, see, that medicine does no good —
people die of the plague just as they did before!
True, but who die ? they who take the remedy, or they
who refuse or neglect it ? There is the test as you
well know. Now try the Bible by that test and your
objection is answered. Contrast any nation, any peo-
ple, any community, that has and reverences and uses
the Bible, with any nation, people or community that
has it not, or refuses to put it to its proper use, and
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WHAT THE BIBLE IS NOT. 13
see the difference. However prejudiced you may be,
you can not shut your eyes to the plainest of facts.
II. The Bible is not one unbroken chain of books^
chapters, and verses, representing one unbroken series
of divine utterances from beginning to end.
Look for no such thing as this when reading the
Bible, but rather the contrary. The Scriptures were
given to men piecemeal, throughout many ages, ao
God saw the right opportunities — at sundry times and
in divers manners — this is what the Bible says of itself;
and not all at once, as if you must have bud, blossom and
fruit, all in the same hour. The analogy here between na-
ture and the word, as in everything else, holds perfectly.
First the hhde^ then the ear^ and after that the full com
in the ear ; this is what the Bible says of itself, and
this is just what we find ^it to be. There is but little
of external unity in the Bible, it makes no pretensions
to any such thing ; you need not be at all shaken by
the clamors of those who would make this obvious
fact an objection to the authority of the Scriptures.
As well might it be objected to the miracles of Christ
that they are not given in philosophical order, begin-
ning with the less and going on to the greater, with
just so many and only so many of each kind.
The nnity of Scripture is not an external, it is an
internal, a spiritual unity, the unity of one grand idea
running through the whole, the idea of reuniting the
human soul to God, from whom it has been so sadly
broken off by sin ; and that too through a long con-
tinued process of sharp conflict and agonizing struggle.
Outside, the Bible is like some of those grand old
rural dwellings in England, a congeries of different
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14 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
buildings in every variety of style, the disconnected
work of many successive generations ; but within, a
perfect harmony of utility and convenience, and all
proceeding on one idea.
Warwick Castle, for example, viewed from the out-
side, is an immense pile, the disjointed work of four
or five successive centuries, with every variety of
architecture ; but within, the apartments, though each
is finished in the style appropriate to its own period,
are most nicely adjusted to each other, so as to form
suits of rooms perfectly harmonious, and make the
whole edifice a convenient and delightful residence.
So with the Scriptures, externally a miscellany, or if
you please to call it so, a jumble, of different composi-
tions, in different styles, by all sorts of authors, and
separated by ages and centuries, yet internally, spirit-
ually, a perfectly harmonious whole. So strong is this
internal oneness, that it is even seen on the outside.
* In the first three chapters of Genesis we have creation,
paradise, and the apostacy ; then through all the suc-
ceeding books, conflict unspeakable, a protracted,
dreadful struggle, till in the last three chapters of
Revelations, we have the new creation, paradise
regained, the final eternal victbry over sin and Satan,
and every form of evil.'*
It is no objection to the Bible, considering the uses
it was designed to subserve, that it is made up, as the
objectors say, of the fragments of Hebrew literature
throughout many ages, or even that of some of the
books the authors names are not certainly known ; —
any more than it is an objection to Warwick Castle,
* Archbishop Trench*
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WHAT THE BIBLE IS NOT. 15
that it was not built at one time, by one architect, and
in one uniform style of architecture ; or that the names
of the diflferent architects of the different portions of
it have not all been preserved. The very interest and
beauty of the edifice is greatly heightened by this
diversity, as every one sees and feels ; and the name
of an architect has no essential connection with the
perfection of his work ; that stands on its own founda-
tion, name or no name. All this is literally true of
the Bible ; it is vastly more interesting, more beauti-
ful, more adapted to the use of mankind, as it is, than
it could be if it had been one compact, uniform treat-
ise ; and the book of Job is just as interesting a book
as it would have been if it were certainly known
whether the name of the author should be written
with two or three syllables instead of one, whether we
should call him Job, or Moses, or Elihu. When we
have a statute book issued by the authority of our
government, we do not need to have the name of each
one of the original engrossing clerks signed to each
individual enactment, to give it authority ; enough that
the whole book, as it stands before us, has been prop-
erly authenticated ; and this we claim has been done
in respect to the Bible.
IIL The Bible is not given to us in any celestial
or superhuman language. If it had been it would
have been of no use to us, for every book intended
for men must be given to them in the language of
men. But every human language is of necessity, and
from the very nature of the case, an imperfect lan-
guage. No human language has exactly one word .
and only one for each distinct idea. In every known
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16 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
language the same word is used to indicate different
things, and different words are used to indicate the
same thing. In every human language each word has
more than one meaning, and each thing has generally
more than one name.
The boy is learning his letters — ^the merchant is
writing his letters — Dr. Johnson was a man of letters.
In these three sentences the same word letters is used
to designate three perfectly distinct and most widely
divergent things — yet nobody mistakes, or nobody
need mistake, for the connection in each case shows
the meaning. How many different names there are to
designate that one thing, a boat. In every known
language words are sometimes used in a figurative
sense and not always in their literal signification. In
the first stanza of Grey's Ode on Spring, there are no
less than eight words used in their figurative instead
of their literal sense! Yet who mistakes ?
^ Lo, where the roty^hosamed Hours
Fair Venus' train appear,
Disclose the long-expecting f owers
And wake the purple year I
The Attic warbler pours her throat
Responsive to the cuckoo's note.
The untaught harmony of Spring:
While, whispering pleasure as they fly.
Cool zephyrs through the clear blue sky
Their gathered fragrance ^/n^."
In all these cases men can mistake if they choose.
They can make the metaphorical literal, and the literal
metaphorical, they can confound the equivocal, and
confuse the synonymous, if they will be perverse and
unfair ; and they can understand aright if they desire
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WHAT THE BIBLE IB NOT. 17
to. All this is as true of the Bible as of any other
book, and no more so.
Moreover, human minds are unlike in the impres-
sions which they receive from the same word; and it
is certain that one man seldom gives to another, of
different temperament, education, and habits of thought,
by language, exactly the same idea, with the same
shape and color, as that which lies in his own mind ;
yet, if men are honest and right-minded they can come
near enough to each other's meaning for all purposes
of practical utility.
Here comes in the objection that the Bible can be
made to mean everything and anything, all sects build
upon it, the most diverse doctrines are derived from it.
This infelicity it shares with everything else that has
to be expressed in human language. This is owing to
the imperfection, the necessary imperfection of human
language, and to the infirmity and the perverse ingenur
ity also of the human mind It is not anything peculiar
to the Bible. Hear two opposing lawyers argue a
point of statute law in its application to a particular
case. Hear two opposing politicians make their
diverse arguments in reference to the true intent and
force of a particular clause in the United States Con-
stitution. Is there not here as wide room for diversity
of opinion and opposition of reasoning, as in regard
to the meaning of any text of Scripture, or the cor-
rectness of any point of theology ? Yet these laws and
constitutions are made in our own language, and our
own time, while the Bible comes to us from a remote
age and in foreign tongues. Enough, that the Bible
can be understood, if honestly studied, as well as any
2
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18 THE bOOKB OF THE BIBLE.
constitution or any body of statutes can be understood.
This much is sufficient for all practical purposes, and
it is for practical purposes only that the Bible was
given.
Yet prepossessions, prejudices and passions come in
so plentifully to darken and confuse men's minds^ when
they are reading the Bible. He opened their under-
aimdings that ffiey might itnieratcmd the Scriptures.
Men in these times need to have their understandings
both opened and straightened out, that they bay
understand the Scriptures.
IV. The Bible is not a specitiien of God's skill as
a writer, showing us God's mode of thought, giving us
God's logic, and God's rhetoric^ and God's style of
historic narration. How often do we see men seeking
out isolated passages of Scripture, and triumphantly
saying that such expressions are unworthy of God,
and could not have proceeded from Him. They are
unskillful, the mode of thought is faulty, they are illog-
ical, in bad taste, the reasoning is not conclusive, the
narrative is liable to exception. God has not put him-
self on trial before us in that way in the Bible, any
more than He has in the creation — ^any more than He
has promised that the Bible shall always be printed
for us on the best of pap^, with the best of type, and
perfect freedom from tjrpographical errors, and that
after it is printed, it shall never be torn, nor soiled,
nor any leaf lost : or that apostles and preachers shall
be regularly handisome, men of fine forms and beauti-
ful faces, and faultless elocution. It is always to be
remembered that the writers of the Bible were ' God's
penmen, and not God's pens.'*
* Beplj to Essays and Reviews.
Digitized by VjOOQ IC
WHAT THE BIBLE IS NOT. 19
It is not the words of the Bible that were inspired,
it is not the thoughts of the Bible that were inspired ;
it is the men who wrote the Bible that were inspired.
Inspiration acts not on the man^s words, not on the
man^s thoughts, but on the man himself; so that he,
by his own q>ontaneity, under the impulse of the Holy
Ghost, conceives certain thoughts and gives utterance
to them in certain words, both the words and the
thoughts receiving the peculiar impress of die mind
which conceived and uttered them, and being in fact
just as really his own, as they could have been if there
had been no inspiration at all in the case. The birth
and nature of Christ afford an exact illustration. The
Holy In£uit in the womb of the Virgin, though begot-
ten of God directly without any human father, (as it
was said, the Holy Ghost ahcdl oame upon thee and the
power of iJie Sighed diall overshadow thee)^ — this
infimt lived by his mother's life, and grew by the
mother's growth, and partook of the mother's nature,
and was just as much her child as he could have been
if Joseph had been his father, the human and the
divine in most intimate and inseparable conjunction*
It is this very &£i of the commingled and inseparable
union of the himian and divine, which constitutes the
utility, which makes out the adaptedness to the wants
of men, both of the incarnation of Christ and of the
gift of the word. Inspiration generally is a purifying,
and an elevation, and an intensification of the human
intellect subjectively, rather than an objective sugges-
tion and communication ; though suggestion and com-
municatian are not excluded.
The Divine mind is, as it w^ e, so diffused through
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20 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
the Imman, and the human mind is so interpenetrated
with the Divine, that for the time being the utterances
of the man are the word of God.
Moreover, should we admit the facts in this objec-
tion to be just what the objector assumes them to be ;
even then they would only show the exact analogy
between nature and the Bible, and thus prove, as far
as analogy can prove anything, that they are both
from the same author. Nature, as well as the Bible,
has its useful things, and its good and beautiful things;
and nature, as well as the Bible, and even to a much
greater extent, has that which to our eyes may seem
mean, ugly and useless. Why not apply to nature the
same kind of criticism which you apply to the Bible,
and say of some of the annoying creatures which you
find on land, or of some of the queer looking animals
which come out of the sea : " God never made such
a looking thing as that — so odd, so out of all taste, so
disagreeable, so useless." Why is not creation as well
as the word fairly open to this kind of criticism?
Certainly it is just as well grounded in the one case as
in the other, and so far as facts go, the creation stands
at quite a disadvantage in this particular by the side
of the Bible. I see no way to avert the force of this
consideration, unless we affirm with the Magi of old that
God created the horses and the cows and the nightin-
gales, and the Devil made the hyenas and the hornets
and the canker-worms. Could not the old Magian press
the believers in one only Creator with the same argu-
ment which unbelievers now urge against the Bible,
and with a much fairer show of justice ? God knows, if
we do not, what He made every creature for, for every-
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WHAT THE BIBLE IS NOT. 21
thing He has made He has a use ; and so it is with
every sentence in the Bible ; every paragraph has its
own appropriate use, and will at some time or other
come into appropriate play — or at least, how can you
prove that it is not so, so as to derive from this source
an argument against the Bible ? Example — the book
of Jonah — ^Paul's cloak and parchment
And here may property be considered an objection
derived from certain alleged wrongs and immoralities
in some parts of Scripture,
1. Some of these are just such wrongs as we find
in nature, such as the destruction of people by hostile
armies instead of famine or pestilence, fire or storm
— ^making the innocent suflFer for the sins of the
guilty; — ^visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon
the children, even to the third and fourth generation,
etc. All this happens every day, both in nature and
Providence.
2. Others are not immoralities at all : the manners
and social condition of ancient times were quite diverse
from ours, and the alleged difficulty arises wholly from
bringing the unsuspecting innocence of childhood in
collision with the fastidious depravity of maturer years.
3. A true account of the ancient misdeeds of men
otherwise good and holy, is not necessarily immoral or
of immoral tendency. This depends wholly on the
spirit and purpose of the narrative. A divine revela-
tion must be true to facts, and give a strictly accurate
view of human nature, and not a false or even a flat-
tering one.
4 A revelation is designedly progressive, and
morally progressive, as well as intellectually and reli-
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22 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
giously, socially and politically, as it must be if ac-
countable men and not creatures merely passive, are to
be trained, freely and not compulsively, from the
infancy of the race to its maturity ; — and we have not
and do not pretend to have the perfection of morals
till we have perfection of revelation in the New Tes-
tament. The New Testament itself says, that the
law made nothing perfect hut tJie hringing in of a better
hope did. — Heb. vii 19. And* there is verily a disan-
nulling of the commandment going before^ for the weak-
ness and unprofitableness thereof
V. The Bible does not consist of systematic dis-
courses, either on theology, or on morals, or on histo-
ry, or on any other topic.
Do not expect the Bible to be like regularly planned
and carefully written sermons ; if you do you will never
understand it or get much good from it. Take any of
the finished sermons of Jeremy Taylor or H. Melville,
of Dr. Dwight or Dr. Emmons, and lay them side by side
with what you find in the Bible, and they are no more
like it than the trimmed lawns, and regular paths and
formal trees of a gentleman's grounds are like the luxu-
riant and untouched forests of nature. So far as the
form of composition is concerned can you possibly con-
ceive of a greater contrast ? It may be said indeed of
the discourses of these great and good men, that they
were adapted to their times and to their congrega-
tions, and this no doubt is true ; but a much better
and grander thing can be said of the discourses in the
Bible, to wit: that they are adapted to all times
and to all congregations ; and this universal adapted-
ness depends in no small degree on that very absence
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WHAT THE BIBLS 18 NOT. 23
of systematic and philosophical structure and arrange-
ment) which is sometimes urged against them as an
objection. All men are not philosophers^ but all men
have impulses; few men are trained to systematic
thought, but all are capable of emotion.
It is only in certain states of society that men can
appreciate the artificial plantation, or are capable of
using it, but all men in all states of society can enjoy
and use the natural forest
It is with the Bible just as it is with nature, both
coming from the same God. The truths of religion
are found in the Bible, as plants and minerals are found
in nature. The mineralogist and botanist must collect
his minerals and plants one by one, as he finds them
here and there scattered over the fields and by the
hiU side ; and he must himself, in his cabinet, systema-
tize and arrange them in their scientific order, for God
never does that. In arranging his plants and mine-
rals, and assigning them to their several places, in their
several localities, God shows an utter disregard of
scientific order.
So the theologian must pick out the truths of theol-
ogy as he finds them here and there scattered about
in the Bible ; and if he wishes to arrange them in a
scientific kortua siccus^ he must make it himself, for God
never makes any such thinga
VI. The Bible is not conformed to the tastes or to
the intellectual horizon, or to the social or ethical stand
point of any one age or nation or race.
Each age and each race is apt to think itself, if not
the whole human race at least the most important part
of it, and that the Bible ought to be specially adapted
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24 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
to its own tastes and wants. But this can not be. It
is intended for the whole race, and not for any one
particular portion of it Naturally each particular
portion of the book must bear the impress of the par-
ticular age and nation in which that portion originated
The Bible in its origin is an Asiatic book, and there-
fore it bears distinctly, as it should do, the impress of
Asiatic scenery and manners ; and yet it is remarkable
for rising above the local and the temporary, and seiz-
ing on those great principles which are common to
human nature everywhere, and expressing itself in
imagery universally understood. It describes the fer-
tility of Palestine by the metaphor of a land flowing
with milk and honey, a pleasing image and one easily
apprehended throughout almost the entire world ; yet
the Greenlander and the Esquimaux would doubtless
be better pleased and have a quicker appreciation of the
metaphor if the image were of a coast abounding with
whale oil and blubber, or walrus meat — but why should
the Greenlander or Esquimaux, in this respect, be grati-
fied at the esfpense of all the rest of the world ? They
have as much claim to a special gratification as the
German or the Frenchman, the Englishman or the
American, and no more. The Song of Solomon^
indeed, is entirely an oriental book, adapted to ori-
ental tastes ; the oriental religious poetry is everywhere
of the same sort — ^and why should not the orientals
have a page or two of their own book specially adapted
to themselves?
VIL The Bible is not a solution of the mysteries
of existence, nor even of the perplexing problems
which meet us in our own every day life.
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WHAT THE BIBLE IS NOT. 25
The mystery of the actual condition of the human
race, as it is now and as it always has been from the
first dawning of history — the question, how can the
existence of so much sin and misery so long continued
be reconciled with the goodness, the wisdom and the
power of God? this mystery finds no solution, this
question finds no answer in the Bible. The Bible
addresses itself to our faith and commands us to trust
in God, of whose goodness, wisdom and power, it says,
we have sufficient proof, even if by searching we can
not find?«out the Almighty to perfection. The sover-
eignty of God, complete, unlimited, how is this recon-
cilable with the complete free agency of man ? ff
Christ must be sacrificed, must there not also be a
Judas, and a Caiaphas, and a Pilate; and how then
are they entirely free ? The Bible does not explain,
it only asserts, the fact. The existence of God from
all eternity, always, without beginning, what finite
mind can form the conception of it ? The Bible makes
no explanations of these perplexing problems, nor
could we understand them while ift this world, even
if it did, any more than the scholar can comprehend
the differential calculus before he has studied algebra.
The events of our own daily life, how mysterious
they often are to us; why was I thrown hither or
thither? why did I suffer this or that? why are my
circumstances thus and so? — the Bible gives us no
information, but still tells us to trust in God and all
will be well. We can have faith always, but knowl-
edge is often beyond our reach. An old pilot, peering
through a dense fog, once said in my hearing, ''I know
where we are now ; I see the cape lights." None of
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26 THE BOOKa OF TH£ BIBLE.
US could see a light house, nor anything else except
impenetrable mist ; but we could trust the practised
eye and the tried fidelity of our pilot, and in this faith
feel as. safe as if we ourselves had the knowledge or
sight.
Is not our blessed Saviour as trustworthy a pilot a$
man could ever sail with ? May we not believe Him,
even when we can not see ? Let us first have the
evidence that the Lord Jesus is what he claims to be,
and then trust in Him.
What then is the Bible?
VIIL It is God's message to honest, intelligent,
thoughtful men, sent to them by honest, intelligent,
thoughtful men, and a message mainly on one particu-
lar subject, to wit, the way of escaping from the moral
evils in which we are involved, and coming to the
enjoyment of peace with God and in our own souls,
for time and for eternity.
If we are lost in a forest, and a man is sent to help
us, we want one that will lead us out of the forest,
and not take up^ the time in giving us lectures on
botany.
It is said that Solomon wrote a very large treatise
on botany, and I dare say it was a very good one, but
I never heard that it was ever received as a part of
the Bible.
I was once in a large ship with some four hundred
souls on board ; and by heavy fogs and baffling winds
and adverse currents, we were drifted on to the rocky
shores of Nova Scotia, without any knowledge of our
exact position. We could not see half the ship's
length in any direction for the fog ; but we could hear
all around us the roar of distant breakers, and we
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WHAT THE BIBLS IS. 27
knew that we were in danger. What could we do?
We lay as still as possible on the water, and tried not
to move. We fired gnns as signals of distress. After
a while, by listening attentively between the booming
of the guns, we could hear the plashing of oars in the
distance. Then we fired the oftener that the oarsmen
might be guided by the sound. Presently two boats
filled with men came alongside. They were strong,
healthy looking men, but they were not very hand-
some nor very well dressed. They did not seem to
be learned men, and I suppose they had never studied
geology, and had formed no theory in regard to the
formation of the rocks along the shores of Nova Sco-
tia. But they knew where the rocks were, and could
tell us how to steer so as to avoid them ; and we fol-
lowed their directions and asked them no questions
about geology, and got safe into Halifax, and lived to
study geology afterwards in the books appropriate for
that purpose. Now was not that the right way ?
But are there not sometimes in the Bible mistakes
and inconsistencies in numbers? and in the names of
individuals and of nations ?
Doubtless literal and numeral errors can be found
in all copies of the Bible. There was never yet a
book printed so carefully but there were some typo-
graphical errors in it, and the liability to such errors
was much greater when books were perpetuated only
in manuscript — and numbers and names are the very
places where such errors most frequently occur. The
Hebrews were sometimes under idolatrous kings, and
sometimes in captivity to their enemies ; and then they
lost almost all the copies of their sacred books. Id
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28 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
the early part of the reign of Josiah, scarcely a single
copy of the Pentateuch could be found in the whole
city of JerusalenL (II Kings, 22.) Their letters and
numerals in many cases were very much alike and
easily mistaken for each other. No wonder if in the
long course of ages there should, under such circum-
stances, some errors in names and numbers of little
importance to after ages creep in ; but these no more
impair the authority of the revelation than misprints
destroy a statute book. Misprints may be so numerous
and gross, and on points of such importance, as to
destroy the usefulness and authority of a book — ^but
this certainly is not the case with the Bible, nor with
the statute book of any respectable human common-
wealth.
Compare II Chronicles, 21: 20, 22: 2, with II
Kings, 8 : 26.
Are there not passages here and there which could
not have been written at the time and by the authors
supposed?
The art of bookmaking, like all other arts, was in
its beginnings exceedingly rude and imperfect In
the times of the Bible writers there were no such
things as title pages, chapters, headings, marginal notes,
appendix or index. Books were written full on every
page, with lines of single letters without any division
of paragraphs, syllables, or even words — just line after
line, continuous rows of letters, completely filling the
page, without any divisions whatever. Of course
what modem writers would put into a title or heading,
a foot note, or an appendix, or index, in ancient wri-
tings comes right in as a part of the original page.
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WHAT THE BIBLE IS. 29
Here is all the ground there is for the objection stated.
The passages objected to are just the foot notes of a
subsequent editor, and not forgeries or fraudulent
interpolations.
But does not the first chapter of Genesis come in
direct collision with the well ascertained facts of geo-
logical science? No. Understand first the purpose
of Moses and his mode of writing, and you will see
that there neither is nor can be any collision between
him and science of any kind. The Bible does not
state, and never professes to state, scientific facts in
scientific forms, but only phenomena, or appearances
to the eye of a spectator. For example, that the earth
revolves on its axis from west to east once in twenty-
four hours, thus producing day and night, is a scien-
tific fact ; this the Bible never states, nor even alludes
to. Indeed I do not suppose that the writers of the
Bible knew anything about it, for " inspiration is not
omniscience." That the sun rises in the east and passes
along in the heavens till he sets in the west, is a phe-
nomenon, an appearance to the human eye, and this
and this only is what the Bible speaks of, just as
in the language of common life and common sense
everywhere, both among the learned and unlearned.
While the statements of the Bible are true to the phe-
nomena, the appearances, they are right, they have
nothing to do with the scientific facts, and can not
come in collision with them, any more than the decis-
ions of a judge in the supreme court can come in col-
lision with the governor's coach ; for the two subjects
are not of the same kind, they belong to two entirely
different spheres of thought, they do not travel at all
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30 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
on the same road ; and how can they come in collision?
A decision of a judge can come in collision with an
act of the legislature ; and a farmer's wagon may come
in collision with the governor's coach; but there is
and can be no collision crosswise from one sphere of
objects to another.
To interpret the first chapter of Genesis, as a geo-
logical essay, and to attempt to remove from it, by
scientific methods, geological difficulties, seems to me
like interpreting the parable of the sower as an agri-
cultural essay, and attempting to avoid the difficulty
that fowls of the air devoured only the seed that fell
by the way side, by learned inquiries as to whether
birds in ancient times could fly over fences, and whether
they were not obliged to keep the road, and solemnly
imagining the sustaining of the latter supposition to
be essential to the vindication of the truthfulness of
Christ as a religious teacher. How much better to
look at the simple fact just as it existed, to wit, that
in the eastern countries, as now in Germany and France,
the farms were seldom fenced, and the fields for the
most part were guarded by old men, women and chil-
dren, whose duty it was to keep away the birds as well
as the cattle — and this practice very generally obtains
in those countries at the present day, simply because
that there old men, women and children are cheaper
than fencing stuff. In the interpretation of so plain
and homely a book as the Bible, a knowledge of the
facts and good common sense are 'generally much bet-
ter guides than scientific ingenuity or metaphysical
subtilty. Everything to its appropriate use. I would
not take a broad axe to mend a pen with, nor a pen-
knife to hew ship timber.
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WHAT THE BIBLE IS.
31
The Bible was not written with reference to science
or philosophy, but with reference to the feelings aiid
impressions and needs of the great masses of mankind,
and they are neither scientific men nor philosophers.
Moses in the six days work of the creation, gives an
account of the fitting np of our planetary system for
its present race of inhabitants ; and intends to show in
opposition to the pantheistic, polytheistic and atheistic
cosmologies of ancient times, that all existing things
are the work of one and the same self-existent, self-
conscious and intelligent God. According to the
analogy of all revelation, these transactions were not
narrated to him in words for him to write them down
as he heard them, but he saw the transactions all pass-
ing before his eyes in prophetic, or rather ecstatic, vis-
ion, and he wrote them down just as he saw them.
Like all popular descriptions the language is phenom-
enal, the events are described as they would meet the
eye of a spectator, and not at all in accordance with
the scientific verities. Each day begins a process
which goes on indefinitdy, which is going on still;
and no one day completes the process even of that
day. It was not till the third day that the sun became
the great luminaiy of the system. Light is not con-
fined to the sun even now ; it exists of itself, and en-
tirely independent of the sun. And who knows, so
as with authority to contradict Moses on this point,
that the sun did. become the luminary of the system
before the third day, or that before the sun became
the luminary of the system a day must be just twenty-
four of our hours, neither more nor less ; or that the
order of the origin of things is not the order which
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32 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Moses haa given ; or that if there had been a spectator
of the scene, the successive appearances to his eye,
would not have been in accordance with the Mosaic
description ? Many of the most eminent of scientific
men have asserted that they must have been so — and
what scientific man has yet demonstrated that they
could not so have been ?
But after all, remember, and the idea can not be too
strongly enforced, that inspiration is not omniscience.
The apostle Paul could write the epistle to the Ro-
mans, but he never knew how to make a steam engine
or run a locomotive. The apostle John, lovely as he
appears in his gospel, and magnificent as he truly is in
the apocalypse, never knew how to make a watch or
construct a kaleidoscope. There are men now in
every city of Christendom, who, though very poorly
qualified to be religious instructors and explain the
ways of Grod to men, can make electrical machines and
construct steam engines, and manage the magnetic
telegraph better than all the twelve apostles put
together ; and I am quite ready to believe that Moses
knew nothing at all of the science of geology.
Look not into the Bible for what God never put in
it — ^look not there for mathematics or mechanics, for
metaphysical distinctions or the abstruse sciences ; but
look there simply for the way of spiritual life and
salvation, and you will find enough, an abundance for
all your spiritual needs.
I can select two chapters from the New Testament,
and if all the Bible were lost except these two chap-
ters, they alone, if we could be assured of their truth,
would guide us safely through all the darkness and
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WHAT THE BIBLE IB. 33
sorrow of this life, and bring us to the haven of light
and peace above. The two chapters to which I refer
are the third chapter of the Gospel of John, and the
eighth chapter of Paul's Epistle to the Romans.
If of all the Bible we had only these two chapters
left to us, and we could be assured that they are
from God, and of divine authority, they alone would
be sufficient to alleviate the suflferings of life, and cheer
us with the most glowing and glorious hopes. The
long continued, unalleviated distresses of mankind
sometimes fill us with painful doubts as to the nature
and purposes of our Creator ; but here in the third
chapter of John it is explicitly declared, " For God so
loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but
have everlasting life. For God sent not his Son into
the world to condemn the world ; but that the world
through him might be saved." Whatever may be the
difficulty, then, it is certainly no want of love on the
part of our Heavenly Father.
When we look away from the world around us, and
turn our thoughts within upon ourselves, we see that
we are in ruins. We long for a virtue which we have
not, and see no way of attaining. What, then, are we
lost ? No, for in this same chapter, we are told of an
inward regeneration, a new birth, by the power of the
Holy Spirit, which brings us into the kingdom of
God, and at the same time, of an outward regeneration
by water baptism, which brings us into God's visible
church on earth, which establishes a covenant relation
between Him and us, and gives us all the advantages
of such a relation. " Verily, verily, I say unto thee,
3
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34 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
Except a man be born again he can not see the king-
dom of God. Nicodemus saith unto him, How can a
man be bom when he is old ? can he enter the second
time into his mother's womb, and be bom? Jesus
answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee. Except a
man be bom of water and of the Spirit, he can not
enter into the kingdom of God. That which is bora
of the flesh is flesh ; ^ and that which is bom of the
Spirit is spirit. Marvel not that I said unto thee. Ye
must be born again. The wind bloweth where it list-
eth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not
tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth; so is
every one that is bora of the Spirit." But are these
advantages reserved for a distant future, or can we
have a present realization of them ? The eighth of
Romans tells us, " There is therefore now no condem-
nation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk
not after the flesh but after the Spirit. For the law
of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free
from the law of sin and death." But how far may
these blessings be extended ? Are they confined within
narrow limits ? Do they include only a few ? Let us
hear. " For we know that the whole creation groan-
eth and travaileth in pain together until now. And
not only they, but ourselves also, which have the first
fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within
ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemp-
tion of our body. For the earnest expectation of the
creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of
God. For the creature was made subject to vanity,
not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected
the same in hope ; Because the creature itself also shall
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HOW TO USE THE BIBLE. 35
be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the
glorious liberty of the children of God," Here then
18 enough for our salvation and our comfort, if we will
but take it aright. How much more when we have
all the riches of the whole Bible !
Yet there are men who would deprive us of our
Bible. On the most frivolous pretexts, by the most
groundless objections, they would rob us of the com-
forts of the divine word, and give us nothing in their
place. As a recent writer has well remarked,*
" Weary human nature lays its head on the bosom
of the Divine Word, or it has nowhere to lay its head.
Tremblers on the verge of the dark and terrible val-
ley, which parts the land of the living from the untried
hereafter, take this hand of human tenderness yet of
godlike strength, or they totter into the gloom with-
out prop or stay. They who look their last upon the
beloved dead, listen to this voice of soothing and
peace, or else death is no uplifting of everlasting
doors, and no enfolding in everlasting arms, but an
ending as appalling to the reason as to the senses, the
usher to a chamel house whose highest faculties and
noblest feelings lie crushed with the animal wreck, an
infinite tragedy, maddening and sickening, a blackness
of darkness forever."
The Bible has various and infinite adaptations.
Some portions are better understood in some parts of
the world than in others. Some parts were better
understood in the past than now — ^and other parts will
be better understood in the future than ever before —
while again there are other portions more closely
* Reply to Essays and Reviews, p. 340-41, English edition.
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36 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
adapted to the present times than to any other portion
of the world's history — ^for it was written not for any
one age or nation, but equally for all ages and nations
— ^and with a divine foreknowledge of all these needs
and adaptations.
Says Lord Bacon :
" The Scriptures being written to the thoughts of
men, and to the succession of all ages, with a foresight
of heresies, contradictions, diflfering estates of the
church, yea, and particularly of the elect, are not to
be interpreted only according to the latitude of the
proper sense of the place, and respectively toward
that present occasion when the words were utter-
ed, or in precise congruity or contexture with the
words before or after, or in contemplation of the pres-
ent scope of the place ; but have in themselves, not
only totally or collectively, but distributively in clauses
and words, infinite springs and streams of doctrine, to
water the church in every part ; and therefore, as the
literal sense is, as it were, the main stream or river,
so the moral sense chiefly, and sometimes the alle-
gorical or typical are those whereof the church hath
most use ; not that I wish men to be bold in allegories,
or indulge delight in allusions ; but that I much con-
demn that interpretation of Scripture which is only
after the manner as men use to interpret a profane
book."
And again this same great philosopher speaks of ^^ a
latitude which is agreeable and familiar unto the divine
prophecies, being of the nature of their author, with
whom a thousand years are but as one day ; therefore
they are not fulfilled punctually at once, but have spring-
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HOW TO USE THE BIBLE. 37
ing and germinant accomplishment throughout many
ages, though the height or fulness of them may refer to
some one age." (Advancement of learning, B. ii.)
This book should be read daily and not too much at
a time, with the expectation of finding in it that and
that only which God has put in it. It should be read
with thoughtfulness, with honesty, with reverence and
with prayer. And it should always be borne in mind,
that God saves us by His Word and by His Spirit,
neither without the other, neither by the Word without
the Spirit, nor ordinarily by the Spirit without the
Word ; but usually by both together in harmonious
and inseparable co-operation.
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CHAPTER SECOND.
THE KIND OF EYIDENGE ON WHICH WE RECEIVE THE
BOOKS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
Doubtless to the great body of Christian believers,
the chief evidence for the truth of the New Testament
is the moral evidence ; that is, they feel within them-
selves urgent moral needs, irrepressible spiritual aspi-
rations ; these needs and aspirations are all supplied
and satisfied by the teachings of the New Testament :
these books they feel are just what the human soul
wants, and He who made the soul and knows its wants
would naturally aflFord the appropriate supply. While
in the exercise of true devotional feeling, the devout
Christian no more needs an external proof of the truth
and divinity of the New Testament, than Elijah needed
a metaphysical proof of the existence of God when
he was ascending to heaven in his fiery chariot. This
is as it should be, and this is the very highest kind of
proof All men need revealed religion, but very few
indeed have the power or opportunity to make the
external evidences of revealed religion a study.
Yet this moral proof is available only to the indi-
vidual himself, and he can not make it evidence to
another. And to the most devotional there come
hours of mental darkness, when assaults seem formida-
ble and faith is easily shaken from without and will
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40 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
be likely to fail unless strongly fortified on external
grounds. Hence discussions of the external evidences
of revealed religion, adapted to the various shapes
which objections assume in different ages and circum-
stances, will always be necessary. The old defences
.will not answer for the new assailants, either as regards
the believers or the unbelievers, or those who are
simply doubtful and inquiring.
The question which is now most perplexing to those
who have time to read, but neither time nor means
for thorough study, is this : How is it that there are
such divesities of opinion as to the genuineness of
the books of the New Testament? So many dif-
ferent hypotheses as to the authors of the sacred books,
and all maintained by arguments more or less plausi-
ble ? The very fact that the books of the New Testa-
tnent can be subjected to such treatment seems of
itself, to some minds, to throw a shade of doubt over
the evidence of their genuineness arid authority. A
Well-known school of German writers began more than
talf a century since by denying the authenticity of
the book of Revelation, and now, after having gone
through with the whole of the New Testament, and
placed all the other books a century or two later than
the authors to whom, by Christian antiquity, they have
been ascribed, they have at length come round to the
conclusion, I believe with entire unanimity, that the
book of Revelation is a genuine relic, and possibly the
only genuine relic of the very first age of the Christian
church.
How is it that the books of the New Testament can
be subjected to such treatment ? The answer is very
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EVIDENCE FOR THE NEW TESTAMENT. 41
ample. It is done by ignoring or rejecting all exter-
nal testimony in regard to these books, and judging
of them by the critic's own subjective views of the
internal evidence only. Any modem works, subjected
to the same kind of criticism, would be lost in the
same diversity and uncertainty. For example, the
letters of Junius are deficient in external testimony as
to their authorship. The consequence has been an
endless diversity of opinion on this subject, innumera-
ble hypotheses, all sustained with more or less of acute-
ness and plausibility from internal evidence, and to
this day there is an entire uncertainty.
Sir Walter Scott's novels were at first published
anonymously, there was no external testimony as to
their authorship ; the public was left to internal evi-
dence only ; the consequence was an endless diversity
of opinion, difierent hypotheses sustained by argu-
ment of equal degrees of plausibility, and an entire
uncertainty; until Sir Walter himself avowed the
authorship, his publishers confirmed it, and thus the
requisite external testimony was supplied ; and since
then there has been no doubt. And if such be the
case where we are well acquainted with the writers,
and with the history and literature of the period, how
much more emphatically must it be true where we
know almost nothing of the literature of the period
and place except by the books themselves which are
in question. It is as easy by such a method to call in
question, to assign to various authors, to maintain by
plausible arguments discordant hypotheses in regard
to the products of modem literature as in regard
to the books of the New Testament. In respect
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to Robertson's History of Charles V., or Milton's Para-
dise Lost, how do we know that these works belong
to the authors named ? By external testimony and
by external testimony only. Reject this or discredit
it, put no faith in it, and we are all at sea in regard to
every literary production of every period of the world.
Combined with external testimony internal evidence
has an important place and use ; but as to that alone,
it is like a sail without mast or cordage, it can indeed
be blown away by the wind, but it can never move or
stay a ship. How much more is all this true of the
books ascribed to the apostles and evangelists, to
Matthew and Mark, to Luke and John, to Paul and
Peter, or any other of the writers of the New Testa-
ment I Who knows enough of the literature or of the
persons of that period and class of writers to decide,
for example, that a certain book ascribed to Paul was
written by ApoUos ? Who knows anything, indeed,
except from the books themselves, of the mental char-
acteristics of Paul or ApoUos? It is often impossible,
by internal evidence alone, to assign even the age of
a book, much less its author. We may sometimes
prove by internal evidence only, that a certain book
does not belong to a particular period, if, for example,
positive anachronisms are woven into the structure of
the work, allusions to things which did not then exist,
or to events which had not then occurred, (except
where we admit the prophetic gift, or can show that
the allusions are by a later hand,) but it is not so easy
to decide by internal evidence alone to what period
exactly a particular work does belong. Many exam-
ples are on record of gross mistakes in this regard
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EVIDENCE FOR THE NEW TESTAMENT. 43
About forty years since Dr. Wilhelm Meinhold of the
island of Rugen, published his celebrated novel of the
Amber Witch. It purported to be the copy of an
old manuscript found in a church there, and written
by a clergyman of the time of Gustavus Adolphus.
Critics who could decide from internal evidence alone
that the books of the New Testament could not have
been written earlier than the second or third centuries
of the christian era, were very easily deceived by the
Amber Witch, and pronounced it a genuine produc-
tion of the period of the Thirty Years' War, being
two centuries out of the way in both cases.
But is there not a lack of external testimony in
regard to the books of the New Testament, so that
we are obliged to rely on internal evidence alone,
vague afi it is, for want of something better? No,
there is no deficiency of this kind ; the external testi-
mony is abundant, more than we have for any other
ancient book whatever, more than we have for most
modern books. The English writer, Dr. Nathaniel
Lardner, and the German, John Kirchhofer, have in
their works drawn out this testimony with great mi-
nuteness of detail, and full quotations of passages ; and
a very good outline, exhibiting the nature and quality
of this testimony, is given by Dr. Pisdey in his Evidences,
chapter IX. Many of the early Christian writings
which contained the external testimony to the genu-
ineness of our sacred books, are now lost ; but many
of them are also preserved : and of those which are
lost, we have passages which we need on this sub-
ject quoted in full by Eusebius.
Eusebius is a very important witness in the whole
matter of Christian evidence, and therefore he is gen-
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erally the first object of attack among unbelievers and
skeptics.
With others also he fares hard, and can hardly ex-
pect exact justice, for the ultra orthodox dislike him
on account of his mildness and aversion to severe treat-
ment of theological opponents, and the ultra protest-
ants on account of his willing acceptance of the eccle-
siastical organization that had begun to prevail before
his birth, and was fully established by Constantine.
It is necessary then that we should give some infor-
mation in regard to this man and his opportunities of
knowledge, and his credibility as a witness, which has
been so bitterly impugned. He was the bishop of the
church at Caesarea, in Palestine, at the close of the
third and beginning of the fourth century of the Chris-
tian era, and he became the personal friend and eccle-
siastical adviser of Constantine, after that emperor had
embraced Christianity. In that church at Caesarea
before A, D. 300, there was a remarkable man who
seemed raised up by Providence to do just the work
in regard to the Christian books which was needed for
that and all subsequent time. This was Pamphilus.
If there ever was a special providence here was one,
for if the work had not then been done it never could
have been done afterwards. Pamphilus was the intimate
bosom friend of his pastor, Eusebius, so that it was
said by their contemporaries that there seemed to be
but one soul between them both, and Eusebius gave
to himself the surname of Pamphilus, after the name
of this friend. This Pamphilus had a great passion
for collecting books, the books written by Christians ;
and every scrap of Christian literature down to his
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own time, which he could find, he laid hold of and
stored it away in his library. He was to the Christians
of that age very much what the late Thomas Dowse
was to his literary neighbors in Cambridge. When
there was a Christian book which he could neither
purchase nor beg for his library, he would laboriously
copy it entire with his own hand. In this way, by
copying them himself, he became possessed of all the
folios of the works of Origen, which were then very
difficult to be obtained. He died early the death of
a martyr, and bequeathed his entire library to the
church at Caesarea, (as Mr. Dowse did his to the Mass-
achusetts Historical Society ;) and Eusebius, his pastor,
all his life long had the use of it. .Eusebius was a
voracious reader and voluminous writer, as hungry to
read and write books as Pamphilus had been to pur-
chase and own them. Thus Eusebius became inti-
mately acquainted with everything pertaining to the
Christian literature of the first three centuries, and
was well qualified to give testimony in regard to all
the Christian books of that period. This testimony is
given very copiously in his historical writings, which
are still extant and tolerably complete. He was not a
bigoted churchman, he was not rigidly orthodox, he
rather leaned towards Arianism, and on all theological
and ecclesiastical questions he was inclined to take the
liberal side ; and he shows no disposition to exagge-
rate the number or the value of the Christian sacred
books, but quite the contrary. His testimony, there-
fore, especially where it is in favor of a book, is clearly
unexceptionable ; and the many literal quotations which
he makes q/x this topic from early Christian writings,
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now lost, are altogether invaluable. But it is said that
Eusebius, though a man of great learning and indus-
try, and on the whole reasonably honest, was credu-
lous, vain and weak, a flatterer of Constantine, and
therefore not a reliable witness. Granting that these
were the faults of Eusebius, it would not materially
affect his testimony on the particular points for which
we here use it. The genuineness of this or that sacred
book was not generally a question on which he had
any prejudices or interests to subserve, as is perfectly
evident from his writings; and it was not a matter
which could usually affect the accuracy of his quotas
tions from preceding authors. Allowing that he was
very much such a kind of man as Cotton Mather (and
I am inclined to think that in many respects he was),
yet Mather is a very important authority in the early
history of New England, and though a very poor wit-
ness on some subjects, is a perfectly reliable one on
others. Mather, on account of his credulity and his
prejudice in respect to those particular subjects, is a
poor witness in regard to papists, and heretics, and
witches, and wonderful providences, and the like;
but who can impeach his testimony or dispense with it
on such topics as the pastors and members of the early
churches in Boston, the books which they wrote and
approved, the meeting of the synod at Cambridge,
and the articles and platform there adopted, the foun-
ders and first graduates of Harvard College, etc.?
And who will dispute the general accuracy of the numer
ous quotations from other authors which are found in
his writings? On all such points Mather is a reliable
witness, and it is on such points as these that we use
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EVIDENCE FOR THE NEW TESTAMENT. 47
his authority in the early New England history, and our
early history would be meagre and bare indeed with-
out him. It is precisely on points like these that we
use the authority of Eusebius in early church history,
and especially in regard to the Christian sacred books;
on such points he is a reliable witness; and if we
throw him out, we must, like the Tuebingen critics,
rely on our imagination for many of our most impor-
tant facts. Reject Eusebius, and what have we for a
history of the Christian churches of the first three cen-
turies, or of the books used as Scripture in those
churches ? Eusebius is in the main a reliable witness,
as much so certainly as the great body of historians,
ancient or modern ; where other testimony is accessi-
ble his historical statements are generally borne out
by it, and where we have opportunity to compare his
quotations with the authors themselves we generally
find them correct. I know of but one exception. It is
alleged that in one passage he wilfully misquotes Jose-
phus. Let us examine this allegation. Josephus, giv-
ing an account of the death of Herod, says he saw
just before he expired an owl sitting on a rope above
him a messenger (";7''^»» <^^9^^-,) of evil tidings to him
as it had before, Avhen he was a prisoner at Rome,
been a messenger of good. Eusebius, in quoting the
passage, omits the word pov^^anu, owl^ and retains only
oyye^c, angel or messenger^ and for this he is accused of
falsehood, and his credibility throughout hotly assailed.
But Eusebius, certainly, and Josephus, probably, re-
garded the appearance not as the natural bird, but as
a supernatural messenger or angel in the form of the
bird, as the Holy Spirit assumed the form of a dove :
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and if so, he gives the exact sense of Josephus if not
all his words. Moreover if he has misquoted by the
omission of a word, willingly or unwillingly, what
other historian, ancient or modern, as voluminous
as he, has not been many times guilty of errors
even graver than this? Very few of our popular
historians, if subjected to so severe a test, would
escape so well as Eusebius ; and are they to be set
down as utterly unworthy of credit on all topics on
account of these occasional errors? Is Macaulay to
be wholly discredited on account of his blunders, ob-
stinate and wilful as they would seem to be, in regard
to William Penn, or his scarcely less inexcusable mis-
representations of Lord Bacon and the Duke of Marl-
borough ? Is Hume to be regarded as utterly untruth-
ful, and rejected as false on all subjects, on account
of his inexcusably mendacious statements in respect
to Cromwell ? Read, especially in the Greek, the pas-
sages referred to, in Eusebius' Eccl. Hist, II. 10, and
Josephus' Antiq., XVIII. 6: 7, and XIX. 8:2; and
compare with them the one-sided, and unreasonable
criticisms of Alford in his Com. on Acts XII, 2.
Dr. Schaff, in his truly learned History of the Apos-
tolic Church (p. 52) bears the following noble and
truthful testimony to Eusebius as a historian. " The
title father of church history belongs undoubtedly to
the learned, candid and moderate Eusebius, — in the
same sense in which Herodotus is called the father of
profane history."
*' His mild disposition, love of peace, and aversion
to doctrinal controversies and exclusive formulas of
orthodoxy, have brought upon him the suspicion of
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having favored the Arian or Semi-Arian heresy ; but
without sufl&cient foundation. It is certain that he
signed the symbol of Nice, and at least substantially
agreed to it; though for himself he preferred the
lower terminology of his favorite Origen concerning
the divinity of Christ."
Such is the deliberate judgment of a Protestant of
well known candor and erudition ; but many so-called
Protestants are in the habit of treating the testimony
not only of Eusebius but of all the early Christians,
subsequent to the apostolic age, as if it were utterly
worthless, and not at all to be relied upon in making
up a judgment on any subject. This is doubtless a reac-
tion from the half deification of the primitive church
fathers by the Catholics ; but it is no less false and
no less misleading than that opposite extreme. If the
men who successftilly achieved such a revolution as
was the triumph of the Christian religion against such
odds as the entire force of the Greek and Latin litera-
txire, and the whole power, civil and military, of the
Roman empire, at the cost of peace,, prosperity, repu-
tation, even of life itself, in the face of every possible
danger, deprivation, distress and torture — a moral
revolution by purely moral means, of the most thorough
and tremendous character that the world has ever wit-
nessed— ^if, I say, the men who did all this were triflers
and liars, and unworthy of belief, incompetent to give
testimony on the plainest matters of fact, then surely this
must have been the strangest, the most unaccountable
of all the chapters in the history of the world. To say
the very least of it, the testimony of the early Chris-
tians, in regard to their own affiiirs, is as good and as
worthy of belief as any human testimony whatever,
4
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But it is sometimes sneeringly said, that it was the
divine power and not the human which established
Christianity in the world. True, but when God has a
great and good work to be done in His church He does
not select fools and knaves to do it. He selects men to
do His work who have the natural capacities and the
acquired abilities to do exactly the work which is to
be done. It was so in the great German reformation,
it was so in the great Puritan revolution in England,
it was so in the great Wesleyan movement, it is always
so. The great struggle which eventuated in the estab-
lishment of Christianity in the world formed no excep-
tion to this general rule. The Christians of the first
three centuries were men naturally and morally fitted
for the huge task which was laid upon them, and which
they successfully finished. They, like all other men,
had their faults, and some faults peculiar to their age
and circumstances ; but they were among the strongest
and noblest men which the world has ever seen, and
fully competent to give reliable testimony as to all the
facts of their own history and literature. To suppose,
as some seem to do, that Christianity all suddenly died
out at the close of the apostolic period, and lay dead
for twelve or fourteen centuries more, and never
breathed again ; and then suddenly started forth full
grown in the persons of the Protestant reformers, like
Minerva from the head of Jupiterj is to think and
reason in a most childish and frivolous way.
But, it is objected, that on a subject so momentous as
that of religion, ought we not to have something bet-
ter than mere human testimony to rely upon ? There
jls the divine testimony within, to all who desire it and
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rightly seek for it The really good man hath the
witness in himself — ^he knoweth the doctrine whether
it is of God. And as to the external word, if there
were as great moral risk in believing it as there is in
rejecting it, the question above stated might have some
significance. But notoriously all the risk is in reject-
ing, there is none at all in believing. On the princi-
ples of the unbelievers themselves, no one is made the
worse in time, no one can be made the worse in eter-
nity? ^7 ft rational, considerate, consistent belief in the
Christian sacred books. It is the order of providence,
that for our important practical knowledge on all sub-
jects, we must depend to k great extent on human
testimony. We axe made to depend on each other.
It is so in medicine, in law, in politics, in all the ordi-
nary business relations of life; men of good moral
principles and sound common sense, get on without
essential inconvenience from this cause ; and so it is
and so it must be, creation being as it is, in regard to
the evidence, the external evidence, on which we
receive the sacred books which contain the divine
revelations to us.
In regard to direct testimony, each separate book
of the Bible must stand in a great measure by itself,
and the witnesses can be most advantageously exam-
ined when we come to treat of the individual books
each by itself This will be the subject of subsequent
chapters. There are general testimonies to the whole,
which will not be overlooked in our discussions.
Some of the most satisfactory testimonies are those
which are merely incidental, where there is no intention
of testifying, but the witness is intent on another topic.
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Such kind of testimony is in all caaes particularly valu-
able. I will here give an example or two to illustrate
my meaning.
Polycarp, the disciple of John the apostle, and who
was appointed by the apostles bishop of Smyrna, and
was well acquainted with several of them, (Irenaeus, III.
3 : 4,) in fragments of his writings, which have come
down to us, has incidental notices of this kind : " Mat-
thew testifies that the Lord said that Moses wrote of
Adam's speaking in this manner, this now is hone of
my hone and flesh of my fleshy for this cause shall a man
leave father and motlier^^^ etc. (Matt. 'sxt. 6.)
" Mark begins with the ancient prophetic announce-
ment of the advent of Christ ; Luke begins from the
priesthood of Zacharia ; John takes his exordium from
the author of our redemption." These extracts are
neither full nor literal ; the sense of Polycarp is given
in an abridged form to show the kind of incidental
testimony to our sacred books from the ancient fathers
who had been in immediate communication with the
apostles themselves, and so onward. But as some,
though without sufficient reason, doubt the genuine-
ness of these fragments of Polycarp, we will add a
passage or two from his epistle to the Philipians, in
regard to which there has never been reasonable ques-
tion. " Do we not know that the saints shall judge the
world as Paul teaches?" (I Cor. vi. 2.) "I trust ye are
well exercised in the Holy Scriptures." '' As in these
Scriptures it is said. Be ye angry and sin not : and
Let not the sun go down upon your wrath : " (Eph.
IV. 26.) Remember what the Lord said, teaching:
Judge not that ye be not judged ; with what measure
yc mete, it shall be measured to you again." fMatt.
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EVIDENCE FOR THE NEW TESTAMENT. 53
\ii. 1, 2.) " Whom God hath raised up, having loosed
the pains of hell : " (Acts, ii. 24.) In thia one short
epistle of about five or six common duodecimo pages,
Polycarp has incidental allusions to, and express quota-
tions from, no less than sixteen of the books of our
present New Testament ; and in all fairness we might
extend the number to twenty, for the four called doubt-
ful are scarcely to be justly doubted.
Origen lived in the latter part of the second and
the early part of the third century. He was one of
the most learned, indefatigable, sincere and honest
men that ever lived. In his seventh sermon on the
book of Joshua, allegorizing, after his manner, the
account of the taking of Jericho, he thus speaks: ''But
when our Lord Jesus Christ came, of whom Joshua,
the son of Nun, was but a type, he sent forth the
priests, his apostles, bearing well-beaten trumpets,
sounding the glorious heavenly doctrine. Matthew
sounds first with the priestly trumpet in his gospel ;
Mark, also, and Luke and John, sounded with their
priestly trumpets. Peter, likewise, sounds aloud with
the two trumpets of his epistles ; James, also, and Jude ;
John sounds again with his trumpet in his epistles and
revelation. Last of all sounds he who said (I Cor.,
iv. 9) For I think that God hath set forth U8 the apostles
last, and sounding with the trumpet of his fourteen
epistles, he threw down to the foundations the walls of
Jericho, and all the engines of idolatry, and the schemes
of the philosophers."
Another brief extract of the same kind from the same
author. It is in his homily on Genesis, xxvi 18-22.
^' Thus Isaac digged again the wells of water which
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the servants of his father had digged. One servant of
his father was Moses, who dug the well of the law ;
other servants of his father were David and Solomon,
and the prophets, and all they who wrote the books
of the Old Testament. Isaac, therefore, again digged
new wells ; yea the servants of Isaac digged. The
servants of Isaac are Matthew, Mark, Luke and John ;
his servants, also, are Peter, James, and Jude; and
likewise the apostle Paul ; who all dig the wells of the
New Testament."
It is in this incidental way that the ancients make
us acquainted with the books of the New Testament
as they had them ; and to quote all that they say, even
in the small portion of their writings which has come
down to us, would make a book larger than the New
Testament itself.
Origen, then, and Polycarp, the one a cotemporary
with the first publishers of the New Testament, and
the other about a century later, had the same New
Testament books which we now have ; and we have
an unbroken series of the same kind of testimony from
the apostle John to the great theologian of the western
church, St Augustin. It will be found exhibited in
full in the English works of Dr. Nathaniel Lardner,
and in the German work of Kirchhofer, alluded to
above. These works contain not only the copious ex-
tracts from the genuine writings of the fathers, by
Lardner translated into English, and by Kirchhofer
in the original languages, but also the most exact refer-
ences to book and paragraph, giving the reader the
amplest opportunity for verification.
We have thus set forth the kind of evidence on
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which we receive the Christian sacred books; we have
shown it to be the same kind of evidence which is
universallj admitted to be satisfactory, and is found to
be satisfactory, in all the most important transactions
of our daily lives ; and it is obvious that we have no
claim on God for any other or any different kind of
evidence. The particular testimonies will be given
when we come to treat of the individual books of the
New Testament.
The next object will be to show that we have the
text of the New Testament substantially incorrupt,
that is, that we not only have the same books of the
New Testament which the first Christians had, but that
we read in these books the same things, and only the
same things which they read in them.
We close this chapter with an interesting fact or two
in respect to the emperor Constantine, having an im-
portant bearing on this whole subject Constantine,
although he did not offer himself for baptism till quite
at the close of life, had always been, from his first ac-
quaintance with Christianity, an earnest and delighted
reader of the New Testament It had been his cus-
tom for years in his palace to read every day to his
household a portion of Scripture, and then himself offer
prayer, like the good Christian house-fathers of the
Puritan stock. After the affairs of his empire had
been established on a sure basis, he wrote to Eusebius
of Caesarea, to have prepared for him, by the best
workmen and of the best material, fifty copies of the
entire Greek Scriptures ; and ordered two of the gov-
ernment wagons, under the special charge of a deacon
of the Caesarean church, to transport these copies, when
completed, to Constantinople for his own inspection.
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This commission Eusebius promptly and joyfully ful-
filled ; and to this fact undoubtedly, in a great degree,
we are indebted for the remarkable accuracy of the
text of the Greek Testament, so much superior in this
respect to the text of any Greek or Latin classic, or
even of our own Shakespeare and Milton. These
manuscripts the emperor gave to the principal churches
to be read in the public worship ; and they were trans-
scribed for the use of other churches. To this source
we probably owe all our best ancient manuscripts of
the Greek Testament ; the Alexandrian, the Vatican,
the Ephraim, the Sinai ; which all give evidence of
Egyptian origin, and of being originally from the great
book market of Alexandria. See Life of Constantine
by Eusebius, IV. 17, 34-37.
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CHAPTER THIRD.
EVIDENCE ON WHICH WE RECEIVE THE PRESENT TEXT OF
THE NEW TESTAMENT AS SUBSTANTIALLY CORRECT.
To ascertain the substantial correctness of our pres-
ent text of the New Testament, we must compare
the readings of our modern printed editions of the
Greek with the earliest manuscript authorities, and as
nearly as possible with the very autographs of the
original authors. It is not necessary that we should
have these autographs, because it is not necessary to
prove a minute, unchangeable accuracy of every word
and every letter, but only to show that there has been
no change which essentially aflFects the meaning of the
New Testament, or hinders the attainment of the pur-
pose for which it was given to mankind.
In the age of the New Testament writers, the most
common and convenient material of writing was papy-
rus— a sort of paper formed of the inner bark of a
reed which abounds in Egypt, and flourishes also on
the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates. Of this there
were three kinds, the sacred, the common, and the
epistolary. The first was very expensive, and its use
limited principally to the pagan priesthood in Egypt.
The epistolary was thin and perishable ; but the com>
mon papyrus was more firm and durable, and this
probably was the kind used mainly by the writers of
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58 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
the New Testament. Paul in one passage speaks of
parchment, and in a manner which indicates that he
set a high value upon it (II Tim. iv. 13).
Authors, at that period, seldom committed their own
compositions to writing, and never for the use of the
public. The preparation of manuscripts was then a
trade, as much as printing and bookbinding are now.
Paul usually did not write even his own epistles (Rom.
xvi. 22 ; Gal vL 11) ; but to prevent forgery he wrote
his own name with the concluding salutation (I Cor.
xvi. 21 ; II Thess. iii. 17; Col. iv. 18). He urges it
as a strong proof of his tender and deep interest in
the Galatians, that he had written to them so large an
epistle with his own hand, though the epistle itself is
much shorter than that to the Romans, which was.
written by Tertius; and to the Thessalonians he writes,
^^ the salutation of Paul with mine own hand, which is
the token in every epistle ; so I write.'
The author dictated to one whose business it was to
write rapidly, and who was denominated by the Greeks
tachugraphoa^ swift writer^ and by the Latins rwtariiis
or amanuensis. This was copied in a fair character
by the kalligraphos^ fine writer^ called also bibliograpJios^
and by the Latins, librarius. The manuscript was then
submitted to one, the dokimazon^ whose business it was
to see whether the whole was accurately written, and to
correct any errors which might have occurred.
The work thus prepared was dedicated to some pat-
ron of learning or of the author, as Josephus directed
his writings to Epaphroditus, and Luke his to Theoph-
ilus; or to some association, as the epistles of Paul
were generally directed to a church ; or to some friend,
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MBS. OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. 59
as Paul wrote to Timothy, to Titus, and to Philemlln ;
and through these channels they were made known to
the public (Compare Hug's Introduction to the New
Testament, vol. I. p. 106 ff. in German).
All the ancient manuscripts of the New Testament
of any value, which we now possess, are written on
parchment or vellum.
For evidence that we have the text of the New Tes-
tament as it was originally given, we must first apply
to the most ancient manuscripts of those books which
are still accessible. Of these the number, antiquity
and variety is most surprising, considering the circum-
stances, and especially when we compare them with
the paucity and comparative recentness of those on
which we must rely for the text of the most celebrated
and most useful writers of classic antiquity.
Herodotus is the most ancient, and in many respects
the most important of the classic historians. Of his
great work there are known to critics in all about fif-
teen manuscript copies, but most of these are of more
recent date than A. D. 1450. One of the best, in the
imperial library at Paris, belongs to the twelfth cen-
tury, another in the library at Florence, is as early as
the tenth, and one in the library of Emmanuel College,
at Cambridge, in England, may be as early as the ninth
century. Of the ethical writers among the classics, Plato
is the most celebrated and the most popular. The
number of the ancient manuscript copies of his wri-
tings is even fewer than of those of Herodotus, and one
of the earliest, which is in the Bodleian library at Ox-
ford, is as recent as the ninth century. This manu-
script bears the date of A. D. 895, and was obtained
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60 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
in the year 1801, by the traveller E. D. Clarke, from
the Convent of St. John, in the Isle of Patmos. In
1847 Mr. Coxe, the librarian of the Bodleian, visited
this convent for the purpose of making manuscript
purchases ; but found the monks there still very sore
on account of the loss of their Plato, which they knew
very well had gone to Oxford ; and he had very little
success among them. Now let us compare with this
statement the antiquity, number and variety of the
manuscript copies which we have of the historical and
ethical writers of the New Testament. Of the manu-
script copies of the Greek Testament, from 700 to
1000 of all kinds have been examined already by
critics, and of these at least 50 are more than 1000
years old, and some are known to be at least 1500
years old; while the oldest of the Greek classics
scarcely reach the antiquity of 900 years, and of these
the number is very small indeed, compared with those
of the Greek Testament. We have manuscripts of
the Greek Testament that could have been read by
men who had opportunity to read the autographs of
the apostles themselves; manuscripts as near to the
life time of the apostles as we ourselves are to the life
time of the pilgrim fathers who landed at Plymouth ;
and the writers of which might have themselves seen
the autograph books in the churches as we now may
see the original records of the old colony in the Ply-
mouth court-house.
When I was in England, in 1836, I saw Dr. Routh,
the President of Magdalen College, Oxford, who had
seen and conversed with men who had seen and con-
versed with James II. king of England. James died
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MSS. OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. 61
in 1701, Routh was bom in ] 746 ; forty -five years be-
tween them. I was then only one link distant, in the
chain of tradition, jfrom the hiding of the Connecticut
charter in the Wyllys oak in Hartford.
Any person who saw Josiah Quincy, in Boston, just
before he died, in 1865, was only two links in the chain
of tradition from the very first settlement of Massachu-
betts. S. Bradstreet, governor, was bom 1603, died
1697. J. Quincy was bom 1772; seventy-five years
between them.
It is about 200 years from the death of the apostle
John to the first full manuscript we have of the whole
New Testament, though we have fragments and quota-
tions from the very earliest periods, from the lime of
the apostle John himself.
The age of manuscripts to which no date is affixed
is decided by various circumstances, such as the ap-
pearance of the parchment, the fashion of the book,
and particularly the form of the letters used, which
varied at difierent periods, as has been the case with
the types which are used in printed books. Compare
the books which were printed in London in the time
of Elizabeth, with those which are printed there now ;
and remember that in manuscript letters the difference
is still wider at the different periods, as great indeed
as the difference between German text and the com-
mon Roman letter ; or, to make a comparison that is
still more exact, like the difference between the capital
and the small letters of our common alphabets. In
respect to antiquity the manuscripts of the Greek Tes-
tament are of two kinds, designated by the shape of
the letters in which they are written. The most
ancient are written in large, square cfipital letters,
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62 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
without any division into sentence, or even words, con-
sisting simply of continuous rows of letters across the
page in parallel lines from the top to the bottom.
There are, however, certain breaks in the continuity
of the writing, corresponding in some degree to the
breaks in the sense, in most if not all the manuscripts ;
but of these each manuscript, as a general fact, has a
scries peculiar to itself, and none of them have the
regularity or uniformity of our present arrangement
into paragraphs and sentences. There are also, com-
mon to many ancient manuscripts, two sets of divisions,
the one called the Ammonian sections, introduced by
Ammonius of Alexandria^ in the third century, and
the other the Eusebian canons, introduced by the ever
active and indefatigable Eusebius of Caesarea, a cen-
tury later. These are generally found together ; and
in manuscripts, too, which have another and more
ancient division like that which we mentioned first
These latter sections and canons, however, are usually
indicated by Greek numerals, rather than by breaks in
the writing ; having been often affixed by later hands,
long after the manuscript had been originally written.
The letters in which these most ancient manuscripts
are written, are called uncial letters, from the Latin
word meaning tncA, as if the letters were originally an
inch long. This letter fell into disuse before the tenth
century, and manuscripts written in it are older
than that date. The other kind of letter is called the
cursive^ or running hand, which is a small letter in
distinction from the capital, and resembles the type in
which Greek books have generally been printed. We
may therefore say, as a general classification sufficiently
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MSB. OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. 63
accurate for our present purpose, that uncial manu-
scripts of the Greek Testament are more than one
thousand years old, and the cursive less than a thou-
sand years.
The manuscripts of the Greek Testament which we
have, are all in the book form, none of them in the
ancient oriental form of rolls. Very few manuscripts
contain the whole of the New Testament; for an
ancient manuscript book being necessarily much larger
than a printed one, for convenience sake, the Testa-
ment was generally arranged in four or five different
volumes. Of the volume containing the Gospels we
have at least 426 different manuscripts of which 27
are uncials, or more than one thousand years old ; of
the volume containing PauVs Epistles, 255 manuscripts,
of which 9 are uncial ; of the volume of Acts and the
Catholic Epistles, 200, of which 8 are uncial ; and of
the Apocalypse or Revelation, 91, of which 3 are
uncial. Here then we have 972 entire manuscripts of
the different volumes of the Greek Testament, of which
47 are more than 1000 years old. This enumeration
does not include all the known manuscripts, nor are all
the volumes arranged precisely like these — ^but I give
these facts simply as a general illustration of the topic
under discussion.
Compare with this what has already been said of the
number and antiquity of the manuscripts of Herodotus
and Plato, which are fair specimens of the classics gen-
erally in regard to this point. Of these two most im-
portant of the classical writers we have less than 30
manuscripts, and not one of these 1000 years old ;
while of the New Testament we have in round num-
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64 THE BOOKS OP THE B. BLE.
bers 1000 manuscripts, and 50 of them more than 1000
years old.
Different books of the New Testament are often in
manuscripts entirely independent of the other books ;
and some books were much more frequently copied
and more generally used than others. There are more
manuscripts of the Gospels than of any other part of
the New Testament, and Revelation has by far the
smallest number.
A few of the more important of these manuscripts
will now be described, that the reader may have the
means of forming a judgment for himself as to their
condition and value. We will select mainly from those
which originally contained the whole of the New Tes-
tament, which ajre very few in comparison with the
whole number. When critics first began to use manu-
scripts for the correction of the printed text, there
were scarcely a half dozen valuable ones known to
exist in the libraries of Europe, and for convenience
they were designated by the capital letters of the Ro-
man alphabet. A, B, C, &c., the manuscript first used
being designated by the first letter, without reference
to its age or value, and so of the rest in succession.
The number of manuscripts discovered is now so great
that all the capitals of both the Roman and Greek
alphabets have been exhausted in the designation of the
uncial manuscripts only, and a beginning has been
made on the Hebrew. As a single manuscript seldom
contains the whole of the New Testament, but only a
certain portion of it, it often happens that the same
letter designates two or three different manuscripts
when applied to different parts of the Testament. For
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HSS. OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. 65
example, the letter E may designate a particular man-
uscript of the Gospels^ also a manuscript of Paul's
Epistles, which has no connection with that of the Gos-
pels, and so of the rest This must always be borne
in mind when examining the references to manuscripts.
Whenever a mani)script contains the whole of the New
Testament, the particular letter applied to that is never
appropriated to any other. The term generally used
to designate a manuscript book is the Latin word codex.
A. Codex Alexakdbinuel The Alexandrian manu*
script is so called from the place of its origin, the city
of Alexandria in Egjrpt In the year 1628 Cyril Lu-
car, patriarch of Constantinople, who formerly held
the same office at Alexandria in Egypt, and who was
so much inclined towards protestantism that he made
an abortive attempt to reform the Greek church on the
model of Calvinism at Geneva, sent to England by Sir
Thomas Roe, the English embassador in Turkey, a
magnificent Greek manuscript of the whole Bible as a
present to King Charles I. This was kept in the king's
library tUl 1753, when on the formation of the British
Museum, it was transferred to that institution, in the
archives of which it is still most carefully preserved.
It has on the back of the first leaf, after the table of
contents, a statement in Arabic, of a very ancient date,
that the whole book was written by a noble Egyptian
lady, and martyr, by the name of Thecla, about the
time of the council of Nice, which was held A. D. 325.
The patriarch Cyril, in the same volume, under his
own hand, certifies to the same fact There is no evi-
dence of a date much later than this. Whether we
admit the accuracy of the tradition or not, we may
5
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66 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
not safely place the date of the book far on either side
of A. D. 350. It was probably manufactured at Alex-
andria in Egjpt, the great book mart of that period.
The manuscript is on parchment, in quarto form, about
thirteen inches high and ten broad, each page being
divided into two columns of fifty lines each, and about
twenty letters in a line, the lines being simply straight
rows of uncial (capital) letters, and generally without
any divisions whatever, even so much as to separate the
words. Some sections are designated by large orna-
mented letters, not at the beginning of the section, unless
the section itself begins with the line, which is seldom
the case, but at the beginning of the next line below.
Whenever the section begins after the beginning of a
line, the first letter of the next line, even though it may
be in the middle of a word, is a large ornamented capital
standing out in the margin. The whole is written in
a plain, square and firm hand, and looks as if it were
the work of one person throughout. If so it must
have been a prodigious labor. It is now put up in
four volumes, three for the Old Testament and the
Apocrypha, and one for the New, with the Epistle of
Clement to the Corinthians. Several leaves have been
lost, but the most serious defect is in the first twenty-
four chapters of Matthew, which are gone beyond
recovery. There are not a fipw literal and verbal
errors in it, very obvious to any intelligent reader, but
no more than what we might expect in any manuscript
of that extent, even the most carefully written. It
has no punctuation or accents, though in some, cases
the end of a word id designated by a small mark. It
has brief titles and subscriptions to the several books.
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MSS. OF THE NEW TBSTAMENT. 67
In the Gospels it arranges Matthew in 68 sections or
chapters, Mark 48, Luke 83, and John 18 ; and it has
also the Eusebian canons, which with the Ammonian sec-
tions, are intended to make out a harmony of the Gos-
pel history. It is one of the most valuable, though
probably not the oldest, of the existing manuscripts
of the Greek Testament, and from its history and its
present location we may properly designate it as the
Greek text of the Protestant church. There was a
reprint of the New Testament portion published by
Dr. Woide, in 1786, in large square capitals, intended
to answer the purpose of a fac simile ; and another
one in common Greek type by Mr. Cowper, in 1860,
either of them sufficiently accurate for common crit-
ical examination. It is difficult and expensive for
most readers to get access to these very old manu-
scripts, and when access is attained they are so tender
and mouldering by reason of age, that they must be
handled with great caution. An accurate reprint,
to the reader, after he has once seen the manuscript,
is more convenient for his purposes, on his own study
table, than the manuscript itself in its sacred shrine.
B. Codex Vaticanus, the Vatican manuscript, so
called from the library in which it is kept, the Vatican
at Rome. This library was established by pope Nich-
olas v., about A. D. 1450, and this celebrated manu-
script has from the first been one of its most valued
deposits. Little is known of its previous history,
though it is supposed that it was brought to Italy by
the learned Greek Cardinal Bessarion in the early part
of the fifteenth century. It is perhaps a quarter or a
half century older than the Alexandrian ; and like that
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68 THE BOOKS OP' THE BIBLE.
it originally contained the whole of the Greek Bible ;
and like that, too, several of its leaves have been lost.
The Epistles to Philemon, Titus, and the two to Timo-
thy, called the pastoral epistles, the latter part of the
Epistle to the Hebrews, and the Apocalypse, are all
wanting. The New Testament is now a quarto vol-
ume, bound in red morocco, ten and a half inches high,
ten inches broad, and four and a half thick, and con-
tains 146 leaves. It is written on very fine vellum, in
a small, elegant square letter, three columns on a page,
so that on opening the volume anywhere in the New
Testament, six columns of well formed letters are pre-
sented to the eye. Each column for the most part
contains forty-two lines, and each line sixteen or eight-
een letters. The letters are very much like those in
the manuscript rolls discovered in the ruins of Hercu-
laneum, one of the evidences of its great antiquity.
As originally written it had neither ornamented capi-
tal letters, punctuation, accents, or anything of the
kind, though some have been added by later hands^
the earliest perhaps dating from the eighth century.
The dates of such additions to, or modifications of,
ancient manuscripts, are ascertained by the color of the
ink, the forms of the letters, the diflTerence in the hand-
writing, and other circumstances of the like nature.
Like all ancient manuscripts, it has no divisions into
words, though some of the books have divisions into
sections, marked by blank spaces, Matthew having of
these sections 170, Mark 72, Luke 152, John 80. It
has also brief titles and subscriptions to most of the
books.
Its value as an authority is very high, and before
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XS8. OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. 69
the beginning of the present century it had been three
times collated, though imperfectly, for printed editions
of the Greek Testament The unreasoning jealousy
of the Papal Court has never allowed to scholars the
free use of it In 1810 Napoleon took it to Paris with
other Italian treasures, and while there it was eitsily
accessible to those who wished to examine it After
the battle of Waterloo the spoils were restored to their
original places; but Mr. Baber, the librarian of the
British Museum, besought the Duke of Wellington that
for the sake of Biblical science this invaluable manu-
script might be deposited where it would be accessible
to scholars. " No (says Wellington) I shall not detain
it ; it is stolen property, and must go back to its own-
ers." So it went back to the Vatican, where it has
been guarded with a jealousy so puerile and senseless
as to deprive the world of the benefits it might confer.
In 1843^ Tischendor^ the best and most carefiil scholar,
in this department, of the present generation, went to
Rome for the purpose of examining it It was locked
up in a drawer of the library, and it was some months
before he could obtain even a sight of it ; and then
with two prelati to watch him, he was allowed to look
at it on two separate days, three hours each day ; but
he was previously searched and deprived of pen, ink
and paper, to preclude the possibility of making a note,
and if he even looked at a text with special care, the
attendants would snatch the book from his hand. In
1844 Edward de Mural t was allowed to examine it on
three diflferent days, three hours each day, but under
the same jealous watchfulness. In 1855 Dr. Tregelles
went from England to Home, armed with a letter of
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70 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
recommendation from Caxdinal Wiseman, for the ex-
press purpose of examining the manuscript; but
though he was allowed to see it, he was effectually
hindered from transcribing a syllable. If the Papal
scholars themselves would make any effective use of
this treasure committed to their keeping, their exclu-
sion of all Protestant scholars from it would not appear
so disgustingly illiberal; but their conduct in this
respect is a repetition of the old fable of the dog in the
manger. For naore than a quarter of a century, Car-
dinal Angelo Mai, a really amiable and learned man,
kept promising a reprint of this work in such a form
as would meet the demands of Biblical inquiry. In
1858, the work was published, three years after the
CardinaVs death ; but so slovenly and unscholar-like was
the whole performance, that even the Papists were
ashamed of it, and in 1859 Charles Vercellone, a monk
of St. Barnabas, and a friend of the Cardinal, pub-
lished a revised edition, a little better than the first
one, but still glaringly insufficient, and altogether be-
low the scholarship of the age. Instead of an exact
reprint of the Vatican manuscript, word for word and
letter for letter, which is the thing and the only thing
that is wanted, and one would think the simplest
and easiest thing to be done, we have an ordinary
Greek text on the basis of the Vatican, containing in
their regular order all the parts which the manuscript
omits as well as those which it has, and the deviations
pointed out in marginal notes, which are none of the
clearest, and all done in such a way as very much to
diminish our confidence in the accuracy of the whole
performance. This is the more remarkable, inasmuch
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MSS. OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. 71
as both the cardinal, and his friend the monk, by their
prefaces and dissertations, show clearly that they knew
how the work ought to be done, and that they were .
themselves capable of doing it We still wait for a
proper examination and reprint of the Vatican manu-
script ; and tOl we can get it, must content ourselves
with the Greek Testament edited by P. Buttmann, on
the basis of the Vatican, so far as known, and pub-
lished at Berlin in 1862.
The following announcement in the *' Nation " news-
paper, which has been made since the above was writ-
ten, indicates a most gratifying change of the papal
policy in regard to the custody of this most precious
manuscript :
" Messrs. Williams & Norgate announce a new edi-
tion— or rather the first genuine edition, for that of
Cardinal Mai was inaccurate and doctored — of the
Greek text of the New Testament from the Codex
Vaticanus. It is edited by Prof Tischendorf, who
spent last spring in Rome to examine the manuscript,
and will be a companion volume to the quarto edition
of the Codex Sinaiticus. It will give the true text of
the manuscript, indicating throughout the pages and
columns of the original, and in some parts the single
lines. The later alterations, which have been so often
confounded with the original text, will be for the first
time distinguished not only from the text but from a
third writing, later by several centuries. The book
will also contain valuable prolegomena : on the history
of the Codex, on its paleographic and other peculiari-
ties, on the corrections, on the date of its execution,
and on the character of the text. Prof Tischendorf
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72 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
makes an extended and careful comparison of the
Codex Vaticanus with the Codex Sinaiticns, with very
remarkable results as to the relation of these two im-
portant manuscripts. A companion volume is also
announced, under the title of an 'Appendix,' which
will contain two more leaves of the Codex Sinaiticus,
in fjELc-simile, being fragments of the Pentateuch found
in the covers of old bindings in the monastery of Mt.
Sinai; nineteen three column pages of the Codex
Vaticanus, taken from fifteen books of the New Testa-
ment, and a double column of the poetical books of
the Old Testament, in fac-simile ; and the complete text
of the letters of Clemens Romanus, from the Codex
Alexandrinus in the British Museum, which has never
been accurately edited. The two volumes will appear
early in 1867.'*
Codex Sinaiticus, the Sinai manuscript, so called
from the place where it was discovered. In 1844 Dr.
Tischendorf, while traveling under the patronage of
the king of Saxony, for research in Biblical science,
was at the convent of St. Catharine on Mount Sinai
From a basket of rubbish intended to kindle his fire
he picked out forty-three beautiful parchment leaves
belonging to a manuscript of the Septuagint hitherto
unknown. These, on his return to Europe, he pub-
lished. On the 4th of February, 1859, he was at
the same convent for the third time, and one of the
monks brought to him the other leaves of that same
manuscript loosely tied in a napkin. To his inexpres-
sible delight he found here not only the remaining
portions of the Septuagint, but also the entire New
Testament with the Epistle of Barnabas, and portions
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CONVENT OF ST. CATHAlClNK, MOUNT SINAI
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HSS. OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. 73
of the Shepherd of Hennas; the most complete, the
most ancient, the best manuscript copy of the entire
New Testament that had as yet been known. There
was no sleep for him that night Till morning dawn
he was busy in transcribing, and he persuaded the
monks to allow him to take the manuscript with him
to Cairo in Egypt, and finally to St Petersburg in
Etcrope, as a present to the Russian emperor Alexan-
der 11. , the great patron of the Greek church through-
out the world.
The New Testament part of this manuscript, with
Barnabas and Hennas, consists of one hundred and
forty-seven and a half leaves of excellent parchment,
written four columns on a page, forty-eight lines in
each column, and on an average fifteen letters in a line,
in a large, plain, square letter, clearly and symmetri-
cally formed. There are revisions and would-be cor-
rections of the manuscript by later hands, beginning
as early as the sixth century ; but as it came from the
hand of the first writer, there was no punctuation, no
division of sentences or words, no accents, no orna-
mented capitals ; everything plain about it, indicating
great carefulness and the highest antiquity. There is
nothing improbable in the supposition that it may be
one of the very manuscripts which Eusebius, by the
order of Constantine, had prepared at Alexandria for
the use of the metropolitan churches. It is the only
ancient manuscript yet known which contains the
Greek text entire without the loss of a leaf. The em-
peror Alexander had two hundred copies of an exact
fac-simile prepared, which he presented to different
learned institutions throughout Christendom, and Tisch-
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74 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
endorf has published a beautiful and accurate reprint
in common Greek type (Leipsic, 1863), which is a per-
fect model for a publication of this kind. When shall
we have such a reprint of the Vatican manuscript ?
Even in this most precious Sinai document there are
just such verbal and literal errors as we might natu-
rally expect in such a work ; but most of them are very
easily detected. The Greek and Roman capital letters
having been exhausted in designating manuscripts
before Tischendorf discovered this one, he refers to it
by the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet, aleph.
I have called these three important manuscripts, to
wit, the Alexandrian, the Vatican and the Sinai, re-
spectively the Greek Testament of the Protestant, the
Roman, and the Greek churches, merely on account of
their history and location ; and not because any one
of these three great divisions of Christendom finds
special help in regard to their peculiarities, from any
of these manuscripts. These three great original
sources of New Testament teaching, with the utmost
impartiality treat all these divisions exactly alike, so
far as their denominational character is concerned, that
is, they say nothing about them whatever ; and they
all three are decidedly and equally the upholders of
Protestantism, just so far as Protestantism, in fidelity
to its original principles, rejects the mere human tradi-
tions, which encumber and overlie the Greek and
Homan confessions, and adheres simply to the teach-
ings of Christ and the apostles as expressed in the
written word.
To give the reader an idea of the different kinds
of uncial manuscripts of the Greek Testament it will
be necessary to present a brief description of two
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M8S. OF THB NEW TESTAMENT. 75
others, diflfering from the three just described in im-
portant points, to wit, those referred to by critics by
the letters C and D.
C. Codex Ephraemi, the Ephraim manuscript, so
called from Ephraim the Syrian, a Mesopotamian saint
of the age of Constantine. This is a very valuable
manuscript of the same class with the Alexandrian as
to age, form of letters, etc. It originally contained
the whole of the Greek Bible, written in a single col-
umn to a page, with from forty to forty-five lines in a
column, and from forty to forty-five letters to a line.
Somewhere in the twelfth century this manuscript was
taken to pieces, the letters as far as possible obliter-
ated, and the leaves used for a copy of the Greek ser-
mons of St. Ephraim. For this purpose the leaves
were taken promiscuously without any regard to their
proper original order and sewed together at hap-hazard,
sometimes top end down, and front side behind, just
as if they had been mere blanks, the sermons of Eph-
raim being the only matter regarded in the book.
These sermons formed a thin quarto volume, morocco
bound, and the parchment on which they were written
contained sixty-four leaves of the Greek Old Testa-
ment, and one hundred and forty-five of the New ; of
entire books of the New Testament, only John II. and
Thess. 11. are wholly missing, and there are also want-
ing in the four Gospels about thirty-seven chapters, in
the Acts ten, in the Epistles forty-two, and in the Reve-
lation eight.
The volume was brought to France from Italy by
Catharine de Medicis as the sermons of Ephraim, it
not having been at that time discovered that the parch-
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76 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
ment originally was used for a copy of the Scriptures,
This was first satisfactorily ascertained by Peter AllLx
about 1650 ; and in 1834, at the instance of the scholar
Fleck, a chemical wash was applied to the pages, which,
without putting Ephraim into the dark, made the evan-
gelists and apostles somewhat visible. The precious
remains were published in an accurate reprint by Tisch-
endorf^ A. D. 1843. It is probably somewhat later
than the Alexandrian, but of great critical value.
There are in it some breaks for sections, but no division
of words, no traces of chapters except in the Gospels,
where we have the Ammonian divisions marked by
large letters ; and the titles and subscriptions to the
books are very brief and simple. The leaves have been
much discolored by the wash applied to them, and
they are so tender and mouldering by reason of age
that the scholar will find Tischendorf 's reprint much
more convenient for use than the manuscript itself
Manuscripts of this kind, where one writing has been
erased to make room for another, are called palimpsests,
from two Greek words which signify to vnpe again. This
manuscript, like the others, has been subjected to the
revisions of correcters, the earliest of whom seems to
be of about the sixth century. This most interesting
relic of antiquity, was, after some hesitation, put into
my hands by the very gentlemanly and accommoda-
ting librarian of the Imperial Library at Paris, with the
remark that it was so old and fragile, and so much in-
jured by the chemical wash, as to require the most
delicate handling, and that the last p^'son who had
been permitted to examine it was the eminent German
scholar Dr. Tischendorf, the discoverer of the Sinai
manuscript.
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HSS. OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. 77
D. CoDEX Bezae, the Beza manuscript, presented
to the library of the University of Cambridge in Eng-
land, by Theodore Beza, A. D. 1581. This is a hand-
some quarto manuscript on parchment of a good qual-
ity, carefully written in 8ticko% that is, lines not filling
the page, but as we print poetry, in a single column,
the Greek on the left hand page and a very ancient
Latin translation on the right, corresponding line for
line and almost word for word with the Greek ; and the
uncial letter of both languages so much alike that on
first opening the volume both pages present themselves
to the eye as Greek. The book is ten inches high by
eight broad, and consists of four hundred and fourteen
leaves, eleven of which are mutilated, and nine, addi-
tions by later hands. Beza obtained it in 1552 from
the monastery of St. Lrenaeus, in Lyons, where it had
long lain buried in dust ; and the heads of the Cam-
bridge University, in acknowledging the present, assure
the donor that next to the Sacred Scriptures them-
selves there are no books which they prefer to the
writings of the famous John Calvin and his friend
Theodore Beza. It contains only the historical books
of the New Testament; and in a text that is very
peculiar, more divergent from the common text than
any other ancient manuscript, and it belongs probably
to the latter part of the fifth century, A. D. 490, or
thereabouts, being the most modem of the five which
we have described. A good reprint of it was pub-
lished by Dr. Kipling, two vola folio in 1793, which is
nearly a/oc-wmtZe.
Nothing is known of its early history, but probably
it was copied from some old Alexandrian manuscript,
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78 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
and the Latin translation inserted for the benefit of
the western churches.
In the summer of 1836 I had the free use of this
beautiful and interesting book through the politeness
of Rev. Dr. Lamb, a younger brother of the Prime
^Minister Lord Melbourne, and then master of Corpus
Christi College. Dr. Lamb was an eminent scholar
in manuscript and antiquarian lore, as is fully shown
by his splendid work on the Thirty-nine Articles.
These five will give the reader a very good idea of
the general character, condition, and variety of our
most ancient manuscript copies of the Greek Testa-
ment.
Here then we have accessible to us five manuscript
copies of the Greek Testament, the most recent more
than 1200 years old, and the most ancient reaching to
an age of fifteen centuries. The proudest and most
costly architectural structures of men have within that
period either crumbled and mouldered away, or become
obsolete and unfit for their original use, though built
of the most solid materials and put together with the
utmost care ; while we of this age can read the same
fragile page of books which were in the hands of men
forty-five and fifty generations before us.
These all give substantially the same text that we now
have. There are diversities among them, and diver-
gencies from our common text ; and these are to be
frankly acknowledged and their real importance fully
indicated, without any attempt at concealment or pal-
liation or apology. No ancient Greek manuscript
hitherto discovered contains I John v. 7, There are
three that hear record in heaven^ etc. ; in our common
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MS8. OP THE NEW TESTAMENT. 79
text the verse John i. 18, reads, The only begotten Son
who is in the bosom of the Father^ he hath declared
him^ but the old Greek manuscripts read, The only
begotten God who is in tJie bosom of the Father^ he hath
declared him; in Colossians ii 2, our common text
reads. To the acknowledgment of the mystery of Ood^
and of the Father^ and of Christy but the old Greek
manuscripts read, To the acknowledgment of the mys-
tery of the God Christ; and so there are other diver-
sities between the old text and the present one ; but
these I think are the most striking examples that can
be found. Do they in the least degree necessarily
change or even modify our ideas respecting any Scrip-
tural fact, doctrine, or precept ? They somewhat dis-
turb those who hold to the notion of a strictly verbal
inspiration, and exact verbum verbo dictation by the
Holy Spirit in the composition of the Scriptures ; but
these I suppose are very few in number and not the
most thoughtful or intelligent
Besides these divergencies between the older manu-
scripts and the modern text, there are also divergen-
cies among the older manuscripts themselves. The
best illustration of this can be found by comparing the
Vatican with the Beza, the most ancient perhaps, cer-
tainly with only one exception, with the most modem
of the five which we have described. As compared
with the common text the Vatican is remarkable for
its condensations, the Beza for its amplifications. For
example if the common text should say, Then Jesus
again went up to Jerusalem^ it would be characteristic
for the Vatican to express itself thus : Jesus went to
Jerusalem. As already shown the Vatican has not yet
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80 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
been examined with sufficient minuteness to speak
with strict accuracy on this subject ; but critics affirm
that from examinations already made, more than one
thousand instances in all the New Testament of such
condensations are found in the Vatican as compared
with other texts. Of the Beza manuscript there has
been the fullest opportunity for examination, and
therefore we can be quite explicit in our designation
of the amplifications to be found in it In Acts xL 25^
the common text says of BamabaB, He went to Tarsus
to seek Saul^ and finding him brought him to Antioch,
The Beza gives it thus : And hearing that Saul was at
Tarsus^ he went there to seek him ; and when he hap
pened to meet him^ he entreated him to come to Antioch,
In the narrative of Peter's visit to Cornelius, Acts x.
after verse 24, the Beza manuscript thus particularizes :
And Peter ^ drawing near to Gojesarea^ one of the serv-
ants running before announced him^ and Cornelius run-
ning out and meeting him^ etc.
Such amplifications, as is readily seen, no more change
the sense or import of the New Testament, than, do the
condensations of the Vatican. But sometimes the
Beza makes a veritable addition to the common text,
a new statement, but always in the same line of thought
and to the same purport. For example, at Luke vi. 5,
after the conversation in regard to working on the
Sabbath, the Beza adds : And on the same day^ seeing
a man at work on the Sabbath^ he said to him^ man^ if
thou knowest what thou art doing^ blessed art thou / bvi
if thou knowest not^ thou art accursed and a transgressor
of the law.
We must here remark that the Beza is the least reli
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MSB. OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. 81
able of the five ancient manuscripts we have selected
for description, and that being written at a later period
and for the use of the western churches, it probably
incorporated into the text circumstances the memory of
which had been perpetuated in the East simply by
tradition. Doubtless the Vatican is much nearer to
the autographs of the original writers than the Beza.
Various Readings. From the thousand manuscripts
(more or less) of the Greek Testament, or parts of the
Greek Testament, which have already been examined,
critics have selected about 50,000 various readings.
But most of them are simple differences of orthogra-
phy, as if the word labor were spelled in one manu-
script with the u, and in another without it. Very many
are simple diversities in the collocation of the words
— as if one should say, Jesvs went to Jerusalem^ and
another, To Jerusalem Jeeaa went Not 50 of the
50,000 make any change in the meaning whatever ;
and among these fifty the most important changes are
such as those which have already been noticed in the
comparisons made on a preceding page. The uni-
formity and purity of the text of the Greek Testa-
ment, when we consider how old a book it is, and for
how many ages it was propagated only in manuscript
before the art of printing was known, and when we
call to mind the vicissitudes of persecution and corrup-
tion and superstition and unbelief and bigotry and dog-
matism and latitudinarianism, through which the Chris-
tian churches have passed in that time, — is perfectly
amazing, and beyond that of any other book in the
world of fi-equent publication and wide extent. Mil-
ton and Bunyan and Shakespeare, though scarcely more
6
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82 THK BOOKS OF THE BIBLf!.
than two centuries old, and always having the advan-
tages of type and printing, open a much wider field
for various readings than any part of the Greek Tes-
tament, the latest book of which has been in existence
more than seventeen centuries. On this subject I can
not do better than quote the following from the North
American Review in an article on Prof. Norton's work
on the New Testament
'^ It seems strange that the text of Shakespeare,
which has been in existence less than two hundred and
fifty years, should be far more uncertain and corrupt
than that of the New Testament, now over eighteen
centuries old, during nearly fifteen of which it existed
only in manuscript. The industry of collators and
commentators indeed has collected a formidably array
of ' various readings ' in the Greek text of the Scrip-
tures, but the number of those which have any good
claim to be received, and which also seriously affect
the sense, is so small that they may almost be counted
upon the fingers. With perhaps a dozen or twenty
exceptions, the text of every verse in the New Testa-
ment may be said to be so far settled by the general
consent of scholars, that any dispute as to its meaning
must relate rather to the interpretation of the words,
than to any doubts respecting the words themselves.
But in every one of Shakespears thirty-seven plays,
there are probably a hundred readings still in dispute,
a large proportion of which materially affect the mean-
ing of the passages in which they occur." It may be
added that it is perfectly understood among scholars^
that no one doctrine of Scripture of any importance
and no practical duty, are at all impugned or materially
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MBS. OF THE NBW TESTAMENT, 83
affected by these " variot» readinga" Nineteen-twen-
tieths of them are of no more importance than the
question, whether the words labor^ Jumor, &c., shonld
be written with or without the additional vowel
A stronger case even than that of Shakespeare has
lately come to the notice of the writer. From a com-
parison of the manuscript f Edwards' Work on the
Will, published within the last century under the super-
intendence of his own descendants, it may be made
apparent that the text is more at Turiance with the
original and more open to objections of this character
than our authorized version itself.
The first printed edition of the Greek Testament
tkat was ever published, was issued from the press of
John FrobeniuB in Basel, in March 1516. It con-
tained both the Greek and Latin text, together with
annotations, and was hastily and rather carelessly pre-
pared by Erasmus. In subsequent editions it was
greatly improved. The Greek manuscripts which he
used are still to be seen in the university library at
Basel. They- are of comparatively recent date, and
of inferior authority. In his Greek manuscript of the
Revelation the last six verses were missing, and he
supplied the defect as well as he could by himself trans-
lating these verses from the Vulgate Latin into Greek.
Cardinal Ximenes had already prepared a better
edition in Spain from better manuscripts ; but this was
not published till the year 1522, when it came out as
a part of the famous Complutensian Polyglott Bible, the
greatest work of that great statesman and ecclesiastic.
Since then, the printed editions of the Greek Testament
have been almost innumerable ; and by the labors of
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84 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
such scholars as Wetstein, Griesbach, Lachmaim, Tre-
gelles, and Tischendorf, the text has been brought to
a degree of accuracy and perfection such as belongs
to no other ancient book that was ever printed. Any
objection to the New Testament on the ground that
its present text is uncertain must proceed either from
the most deplorable ignorance in regard to such mat-
ters, or from a spirit of the most hopeless cayilling.
Our present division into chapters and verses is com-
paratively modem, the chapters going no farther back
than the thirteenth century, and the verses being as re-
cent as the sixteentL Neither do we claim any divine
authority for the punctuation or the division into
words : but among intelligent readers of the original
there will be found very little occasion for difierence
of opinion on either of these points.
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ILLUSTRATIONS TO CHAPTER THIRD.
For the following fac-similes I am indebted princi-
pally to the published writings of Prof Tischendorf,
Dr. Hartwell Home, Dr. Christopher Wordsworth, and
the Rev. Frederick Henry Scrivener.
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ILLUSTRATION A.
No. I is the English of John i. 1-7, printed in squaie Boman cap-
itals without any division of words, just like the dd Greek manu-
scripts represented in the following illustrations. It will be found on
trial that such writings are not so difficult to be read as might at first
be supposed.
No. 2 is John xiv. 6,Tepresented in the same way with the Greek
in a parallel column for the purpose of comparison.
No. 8. is Matt. L 18, 19, with the parallel column of Gieek«
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ILLUSTRATION A.
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ANDTHELIGHTINDARKNESSSHIN
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ILLUSTRATION B.
This is Luke xxiv. 49-53, in exact fac-simile from the Sinai man-
uscript The last two lines are the words euangelion hata hakany
the title of the book, as in most of these manuscripts the title is at
the end instead of the beginning.
The line at the top of the page is the clause at the close of the
53d verse, and was carried up irUo Aearen, which was not in the man-
uscript as originally written, but was added by a later hand. Tlie
difference in the hand-writing in perfectly obvious. A mark between
the lines, a little more than half way down the column, shows where
the correction is to come in* It ia to be read in the line below the
Biark*
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B.
Aa>THNen>rr€Ai
KMToynxrfocM-T
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kataaykan'^
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ILLUSTRATION C.
No. 1, John i. 1-7, in exact fac- simile of the Alexandrian mann-
Ecript In thb extract there is no defect in the writing.
No. 2, is Rev. i. 1-4, from the same manuscript ; but the first let-
ters of most of the lines, as shown by the dots, have become obliter-
ated by the ravages of time. It will be seen, on trial, that such slight
imperfections do not at all obscure the sense in reading.
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I
c.
1
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ILLUSTRATION D.
No. 1, is Psalm L 1, 2, and the first line of Terse 3, in exact fiic-
simile of the Yadcaii manuscript, exhibiting the mode in which the
poetical books are there written, in tttchois as it is called.
No. 2/ is Ezekiel L 1-8, fix)m the same manuscript We are
obliged here to give our illustration from the Old Testament instead
of the New, because the stupid jealousy of the Papal court has never
yet allowed a &c- simile of any part of the New Testament to be
taken.* The writing however is the same in both parts, and the illus-
trations above from Psalms and Ezekiel give a very sufficient idea
of the whole manuscript
* By the exertloiis of Prof. Tischendorf, we have now WBon to hope that a
different policy wUl beroafter be poraaed.
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D.
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ILLUSTRATION E.
This is the famous text, 1 Tim. iii. 9-15, in exact fac simile of the
Ephraem manuscript palimpsest. The pale writing is the New Tes-
tament passage in Greek, and the bright black lines are a part of one
of St Ephraem's sermons in Greek, to provide material for which,
on account of the dearness of parchment, the New Testament itself
had been obliterated. It will be seen that there is very little diffi-
culty in reading the original Greek.
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ILLUSTRATION F.
This illustration is designed to exhibit the differences of hand-writing
in which the various corrections are made from time to time in an-
cient manuscripts ; and how we are able to detect, by the style of the
penmanship, the comparative age of each of the corrections. The
specimens are all from the Sinai manuscript.
No. 1, is John v. 6-9.
No. 2, is John vi. 14, 15.
No. 3, is a correction in Matt. v. 45.
No. 4, is a correction in Matt. x. 39.
No. 5, is a correction in 2 Cor. x. 12.
No. 6, is a correction in Matt. ix. 10.
No 7, is a correction in Matt iii. 13, 14.
No 8, is a correction in Luke xxiv. 51.
No« 9, » a correction in Matt xxiiL 35.
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F.
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ILLUSTRATION F— ContmneA
No. 10, is a caligrapbic flourish*
No. 11, is a oorreotion in Rev. xi. 1.
No. 12, is a correction in Isaiah viii. 22*
No. 13, is a correotion in 1 Tim. iii. 16.
No. 14, is a correction in Matt xix. 3.
No. 15, is a sentence bj a certain monk who had been employed
on the manuscript, or had the use of it, nearly as late as the twelfth
century* The meaning is this : Rememhery Lardy the soul of the sin-
ner Dionysius Uie momky vfhen thou contest into thy kingdom. Such
sentences are not uncommon in the ancient Bible manuscripts. They
form no part of the text, and are simply pious ejaculations of the
writers or readers; In this instance the ugly, awkward, cramped,
barbarous hand shows plainly enough a later and barbarous period,
and contrasts very strongly with the neat, plain and not inelegant
hand of the original writer of the manuscript. The difference in the
writing, in each instance, is wdi worthy of study, and of great interest
to the investigator.
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ILLUSTRATION G.
This is a fisbc simile of Acts vii. 2, from the Codex Landianus, a
very valuable manuscript of the sixth century, now in the Bodleian
library at Oxford. The right hand column is the original Greek,
and the left hand a Latin translation. It will be seen how dosely,
at that period, the Latin and Greek alphabets resembled each other,
and how very short the lines in which the ancient manuscripts were
often written.
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0 ^8
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ILLUSTRATION H
This illustration is intended to incUcate the transition from the
square capitals, in which the Greek manuscripts of the New Testa-
ment were written previous to the tenth century, to the cursive or
running hand which came into use subsequent to that period, and
gave form to the Greek type used when printing was introduced.
No. 1, is the beginning of John's Gospel, i. 1-10, as presented in
an elegant manuscript of the latter part of the fourteenth century.
It is called the Codex Ebnerianusy and belongs to the University of
Oxford.
No. 2, is Matt xv. 1, 2, in exact fac simile from an elegant manu-
script of the Gospels in the city of Basle, as early as the tenth cen-
tury, and probably among the earliest that were written in the coi^
sive character*
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a^Hllirli
EK ^^-QJ^ **P ©/-^V/ l^ai cf^ l^c nil "^rp^t ^^Bf
To C* up 5 <t>ttMr 3 i^^JKH' i ^ <(>o^l 34, »
2
(fll t^ J^:yC»P TCC4 QUMUr ^OLOf otCl 0 1 1^ ff^lMACL/l^
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A
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N> ".
CHAPTER FOURTH.
BBIEF BIOGRAPHIES OF ONE HUNDRED OF THE ANCIENT
WITNE88ES TO THE NEW TESTAMENT BOOKS, WHOSE
TESTDf ONT IS HOST IMPORTANT AND MUCH OF IT CITED
IN THE FOLLOWING PAGES.
Tms list includes not only orthodox Christians, but
also Jews, heretics, pagans, and infidels. Where testi-
mony from such varied and even opposing sources is
really coincident and self-consistent, it must be substan*
tially correct
As we have affirmed in chapter second that the tes-
timony on which the genuineness of the sacred books
of the New Testament rests, is as good as any human
testimony whatever on any subject, we proceed now
to submit to the reader a brief account of the princi-
pal witnesse&
Agrippa Castor^ lived under the emperor Hadrian,
about A. D. 120. He wrote a work in 29 books
against Basilides of Alexandria, the Egyptian Gnostic.
This work was read by Eusebius, and is referred to by
him in very high terms in E. H. iv. 9. Agrippa was
highly distinguished as a man of extensive learning,
and he was confided in as a man of integrity and
truthfulness. Jerome, Catal Script, c. 20.
Alexander^ Bishop of Alexandria from A. D. 312 to
326. He took an active part in the controversy
against Arius and was a member of the Council of
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102 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Nice, A. D. 325. He wrote letters to various bishops
respecting the Arian controversy. Of these there are
now extant, one to Alexander, bishop of Byzantium,
in Theodoret L 1; another to the Catholic bishops
generally throughout the world, in Socrates i. 6 ; some
fragments of a letter against the Arians, and a short
epistle to the elders and deacons of Alexandria in Cot-
elerius.
Ameliu8^ named also Oentilianus^ bom in Tuscany
in the third century. He was a Platonic philosojJher,
a disciple of Plotinus, and wrote in defence of his
master.
Ambrose was bom in 333, the son of a Roman
proconsul in Gaul. He held an office in Milan, and in
the midst of a fierce controversy for the vacant bish-
opric there, he, though a mere civilian, was suddenly
chosen to the dignity by popular acclamation. He ac-
cepted the appointment with reluctance, but held it
with great activity and conscientiousness till his death
in 397. Of his courage and decision in the discharge
of his official duties he gave a brilliant proof in his
treatment of the emperor Theodosius, whom he with-
stood at the door of his church and compelled him to
submit to the regular church discipline, on account of
some cruelties of which he had been guilty. The
feeble attempt of Gibbon to deprive Ambrose of all
the cifedit of this daring act of official duty, only shows
the shallowness of the claims of the infidel historian to
freedom from partizan bias, on which he so much
values himself. Ambrose was eminent for his services
as a writer of hymns and promoter of church musdc.
His writings, still extant, are numerous and easily acces-
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THE ONE HUNDRED WITNESSES. 103
sible. He was a man of great native nobleness of
character as well as of Christian conscientiousness and
unshaken intrepidity in the discharge of his Christian
obligations.
Ammoniua. There are two witnesses of this name.
One is the celebrated Ammonius Saccas, who gave a
more definite form to the eclecticism of the new Pla-
tonists, and was the philosophical teacher of Origen
about 250. He remained all his life a pagan.
Gotemporary with him there was also a Christian
Ammonius, whose writings, some of which are still
extant, are quoted by both Eusebius and Jerome.
Among these are a treatise on the agreement of Moses
and Jesus, and a harmony of the Gospels.
Amphilochivs of Cappadocia, at first a monk and af-
terwards bishop of Iconium in Lycaonia. He was a
strenuous opponent of the Arians, and influenced the
emperor Theodosius to issue an edict against themu
He was present at the synod of Constantinople in 394.
He was highly esteemed by Basil the great. Most of
his writings, which consisted mainly of sermons and bi-
ographies, are lost ; but one of his poetical works, still
extant, contains a complete catalogue of the Christian
writings as they were received in his time. This how-
ever is by some ascribed to Gregory of Nazianzen.
Andreas^ once bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia,
abdut the year 500, wrote a commentary on the Revela-
tion which is still extant, and is in many respects a
work of great interest and importance.
Appdles^ about the year 188, was a disciple of Mar-
cion, and a fellow student of Lucian. Afl;er having
been excommunicated by Marcion for the alleged crime
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104 THB BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
of unchastity, he founded a Gnostic sect of his own.
He is quoted by Ambrose, and notwithstanding his
rather doubtful moral character, there is no ground
for the impeachment of his testimony in regard to the
Sacred Books in use among the Christians of his time.
He had neither interests nor prejudices, which, so far
as we can judge, would induce him to give false testi-
mony on such a subject as this.
Apollomus. In th^ first century after Christ, there
was a pagan of this name, from Tyana in Cappadocia.
He was said to be a worker of miracles ; he traveled
extensively as a teacher of morals and religion, and
his miracles were often claimed to be on a level with
those of the Lord Jesus. A few of his letters are still
extant ; and a biography of him principally from the
writings of Philostratus, was published by the English
deist Blount, in 1680.
The Christian ApoUonius was a presbyter at Ephesus,
and an active opponent of Montanus. He lived late
in the third century, and is quoted by Eusebius.
Archdavs^ a bishop in Mesopotamia, about the year
277, and one of the first opponents of the sect of the
Manicheans.
Aretas^ archbishop of Cli^sarea in Cappadocia, about
540, the author of a commentary on Revelation which
is still extant
Artus^ the much celebrated founder of the sect of
Arians, was the son of Ammonius, from Lybia or Alex-
andria, and a contemporary of Constantine. He was
presbyter at Alexandria, under the bishop Alexander,
when he first propounded his doctrine that the Son is
created and not from eternity. Condemned by the
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THB ONE HUNDRED WITNESSES. 105
Conncil of Nice in 325 he was banished. He made his
'submissions in a creed artfdlly worded, and returned
to Alexandria, whence he was expelled by Atha-.
nasius his chief opponent. Repairing to Constantino-
ple, the emperor, much against the wishes of the patri-
arch Alexander, peremptorily required that he should
be again received into the communion of the Alexan-
drian church ; but before this requisition could be for-
mally carried out, he died very suddenly, not without
suspicion of poison, in the year 336. Some of his
writings, consisting principally of poems and letters,
are still extant, and contain a variety of important tes-
timony which there is no reason to impeach.
Amohiua^ a teacher of rhetoric at Sicca in Africa,
near the close of the third century, was at first an open
opponent of Christianity. By a remarkable dream he
was brought to acknowledge Christ, and requested
baptism of the bishop of Sicca, who required, as a
proof of the sincerity and genuineness of his conver-
sion, that he should write a book in defence of the
Christian faith. This gave occasion to his celebrated
work, entitled Disputations against the Gentiles, now
indeed far more valuable for its testimony to facts
than for its logical arguments.
Athanasius succeeded Alexander in the episcopal
dignity at Alexandria in 326, and died in 373. His
whole official life was spent in heated and violent con-
troversy with Arius and the Arians, sometimes trium-
phant and sometimes conquered, so that, of the forty-
six years of his bishopric, twenty were spent in exile.
It was not till after the death of the emperor Valens,
that his triumph became complete and permanent.
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106 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
The creed which bears his name was not his composi-
tion, but a large number of his writings are extant,
. easily accessible and of great value.
Athenagoraa was a philosopher of Athens about the
year 160. After his conversion to Christianity he
wrote an apology for the Christians, directed to the
emperor Marcus Aurelius and his son Commodus, and a
treatise on the resurrection of the flead, a subject of
great interest at Athens, as we learn frotn the apostle
Paul, Acts xvii. These writings are both still accessi-
ble.
Aurelius Augustin^ the son of Patricius and Monica,
was bom at Tagaste in Africa, in the year 359. In
early life, through the influence of bad associates, he
was much given to dissipation, and was 'for a consid-
erable time partial to the doctrines of the Manichaeans.
He lived at Rome and later at Milan as a teacher of
rhetoric. By the influence of Ambrose especially he
he was led to the study of the Scriptures and particu-
larly the Epistles of Paul. After a long and severe
inward struggle, he became a convert to Christianity,
and returned to Africa first as a priest and afterwards
as bishop of Hippo, in which last position he remained
during his life. He was the most powerful and
influential of all the teachers of the Latin church.
Particularly by his conflict with the Pelagians he came
to precise statements respecting the doctrines of sin
and grace, and thus became the most celebrated the-
ologian of the Christian world. His writings are volu-
minous and of easy access.
Bardesanes was a native of Mesopotamia and lived
at Edessa about 170. He at first belonged to the
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THE ONE HUNDRED WITNESSES. 107
orthodox church, then became a convert to Valentinus,
then became the founder of a Gnostic system of his
own, but in the latter part of his life returned to
sounder views. He was a man of candor, acuteness
and learning. He wrote much in the Syrian language,
and his works were so highly esteemed that they were
translated into Greek and widely read. He published
refutations of Mart^ion and almost all the heretics of
his time ; he composed a dialogue on fate dedicated to
Antoninus, a work on the persecutions to which the
Christians were subjected, etc. Eusebius gives him a
high character. E. H. xx. 30.
Barnabas^ a Levite of Cyprus, according to Clement
of Alexandria one of the seventy disciplea He was
the companion of Paul at Antioch and also on his first
missionary journey ; and after his separation firom Paul
he went with Mark to Cyprus, and probably to other
places, preaching the gospel. There is an interesting
epistle which the ancients universally ascribe to him,
though it has been doubted by some of the modems.
It is contained entire in the original Greek in the
famous Sinai manuscript discovered by TischendorC
It has been often publ&hed, was highly esteemed in
the ancient church, and though in its present form it
may contain some interpolations, there is no good rea-
son for rejecting it as a whole.
BaailideSy the most celebrated of the Egyptian
Gnostics, lived at the close of the first and the begin-
ning of the second century. He propagated his senti-
ments with great activity, zeal and power, in Africa
and Asia, assigning great prominence to the doctrines
of emanation and dualiam. He wrote a commentary
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108 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
on the Gospels in 24 books, which was refuted' by
Agrippa Castor, and from which subsequent Christian
writers have made many extracts. An apocryphal
gospel is also ascribed to him. His testimony is very
valuable as to the Gospels and other New Testament
books received in his time. Eusebius, H. E. iv. 7.
Basil the Great^ the brother of Gregory of Nyssa^
was bom at Caesarea in Cappadocia near the begin-
ning of the fourth century. He studied at Antioch,
Constantinople and Athens, became a monk and a
founder of monasteries in Pontus ; he was afterwards
a presbyter in Caesarea, his native place, under Euse-
bius, but disagreeing with his bishop, he returned to
his monkish life in Pontus ; and again becoming recon-
ciled to Eusebius, he succeeded him as bishop of Cae-
sarea in Cappadocia. He was one of the most distin-
guished men of his time and a zealous helper of Atha-
nasius in his conflict with the Arians. His works stiU
extant are very numerous and have often been repub-
lished. Among them we have 428 letters, 9 homi-
lies in verse, monastic rules, liturgies, etc.
Beryllua was bishop of Bostra in Arabia, about the
year 290. He held sonie notions respecting the person
of Christ, which Origen so eflFectually refuted that he
renounced them entirely, and became in consequence
one of Origen's firmest and most devoted friends.
Caivs^ a presbyter at Rome about the year 200.
He was the author of three works of which there are
fragments preserved by Eusebius ; and the Italian Mu-
ratori, not without good reason, ascribes to him a frag-
ment containing one of the most ancient and interest-
ing catalogues in existence of the writings of the New
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THE ONB HUNDRED WITNESSES. 109
Testament at that time received. He is very often
quoted by the church historian Eusebius, who sets great
value on his testimony. The important fragment re-
ferred to was discovered in the Ambrosian library at
Milan by the librarian Muratori, about the year 1720.
Garpocratea lived at Alexandria in Egypt early in
the second century, and was the founder of an anti-
nomian system of Gnosticism, which was further de-
veloped and propagated by his son Epiphanius. He is
largely quoted by Irenaeus, Epiphanius and others.
Casaianua (Julius)^ a Valentinian Gnostic of the
second century, whose writings are quoted by Clement
of Alexandria.
Gassiodorvs (Magnus Aurelius) was bom at Cala-
bria about the year 470. He was prime minister of
Theodoric, and was engagei^ in political life with great
distinction and success till he was seventy years old.
He then retired to a monastery founded by himself
in Calabria, and became a very voluminous writer on
religious subjects, living to be more than ninety years
old.
Cehus was a heathen, an Epicurean philosopher, and
a violent enemy of the Christians. He lived in the
latter part of the first and the beginning of the second
century, very near the time when the books of the
New Testament were first collected into a volume.
He wrote a very elaborate book which he entitled the
Ihie Word (or Logos), in which he undertakes to
refute the Christians out of their own writings. He
introduces a Jew who quotes very largely from the
Christian Scriptures. The very object and plan of the
work, as well as the zeal and ability of the author,
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110 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
make it an invaluable witness to the Christian books
as then received. Though we have not the book of
Celsus entire, yet in the refutation of it by Origen,
there are very large and literal quotations from it, in
which the views of this zealous pagan in regard to the
Christian books, as he read them at that early period,
are very fully developed. There is nowhere to be
found a more important witness to the integrity and
genuineness of the books of the New Testament than
this very zealous and able enemy of Christianity.
Chrysostom (John) was born at Antioch about the
year 354. He was one of the most eflfective preachers
of the Christian church, and it was on account of his
eloquence that he received the surname of Chrysostom
or Golden Mouth. He was patriarch of Constantino-
ple, but had a very bitter enemy in the empress
Eudoxia, by whose influence he was twice banished,
and he finally died in exile at Comane in Pontus in the
year 407. His writings are very numerous, consisting
of treatises, sermons and letters; they have been
collected with great care, and frequently published in
very handsome volumes. He is the prince of the
Greek Church Fathers.
Glavdiua Apollinaria was bishop of Hierapolis in
Phrygia about the year 173, and an able and zealous
defender of the Christian truth. The ancients, par-
ticularly Eusebius and Jerome, were acquainted with
many of his writings, as for example, an apology to
the emperor Marcus Aurelius, five books against the
pagans, two respecting the truth, two against the Jews,
letters against the Montanists ; but none of these are
now extant.
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Clement of Rome^ the same spoken of by Paul in
his Epistle to the Phil. iv. 3, was a Roman by birth, a dis-
ciple of the apostles, and bishop of Rome at the close
of the first century. Under his name we have two
epistles to the church at Corinth, the first genuine and
entire, but the second a mere firagment and of doubt-
ful authority. The book ascribed to him, under the
title of Recognitiona^ is a religious romance in ten
books which we have only in the Latin translation of
Rufinus. The Clementina^ 19 homilies, appear to be
a reproduction of the Recognitions in a modified form.
These works are very important as contributions to
the history of the Ebionites ; they belong to the ear-
liest period of Christian literature after the New Testa-
ment, and probably may be the genuine works
of Clement the fidend of Paul. The Canons of the
Apostles, and the Apostolic Constitutions are more
doubtful as to their authorship ; and the same may
be said of the five letters, one of which is directed
to the apostle James. All these books have been
many times published, and are very valuable as wit-
nesses to the opinions and the literature of the
first age of the Christian church ; and they all tend to
confirm the genuineness of the New Testament books,
as we now have them.
Clement (Titus Flavins) of Alexandria^ was by birth
a pagan and well instructed in all the branches of
Greek literature. He received his Christian instruc-
tion from the celebrated Alexandrian teacher Pantae-
nus, in the year 187 became his successor in the presi-
dency of the catechetic school, and in the course of time
had the world famed Origen as one of his scholars. His
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112 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Institutes, in which he gave a concise view of the con-
tents of the Old and New Testament, are lost, except
a few fragments preserved by later writers. But we
have five entire works by him which are of great value
and which in their day laid the foundation of Christian
theology as a science. We see in all his writings that
he used the same Bible, especially the same New Tes-
tament, which we now have.
Cyprian (Thasciria CaedUvs) was bom in Carthage,
of pagan parents, about the year 200. He was at first
a teacher of rhetoric, a heathen, a man bf genius, and
rather dissipated. In 245 he was converted to Chris-
tianity by means of Caecilius, a presbyter of Carthage,
and immediately entered the service of the church ;
and though he lived but twelve years after this, by
his incessant activity and great strength of character
he rendered services which have placed his name
among the highest of all Christian antiquity. He be-
came bishop of Carthage in 248 ; during the Decian
persecution he fled, while others apostatised ; and the
question of their subsequent restoration gave rise to a
violent controversy, which he with great difficulty sup-
pressed. He took part with the Koman bishop Cor-
nelius against his rival Novatian, in order to restore
the unity of the church. When another bishop of
Rome, Stephen, undertook to impose the traditions
of Rome on other churches as if they were of univer-
sal obligation, Cyprian was his most energetic and
determined opponent. In the persecution under-
Valerian he was at first exiled and then beheaded in
the year 256. His works, consisting of short treatises,
called forth by the exigencies of his times, and familiar
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THE ONE HUNDRED WITNESSES. 113
letters, have been preserved with great care and often
republished Of his letters there are more than eighty,
and they give a most striking and truthful picture of
all that pertains to the organization and discipline, the
spirit and the life of the church at that early period.
He had high ideas of the episcopal authority, and was
most distinguished as an organizer and disciplinarian.
Gyrill^ bishop of Jerusalem, in the middle of the
fourth century. At first he was a moderate semi-Arian,
but subsequently adopted the Nicene creed, and for
this was by the Arian party expelled from his see.
His writings that remain to us consist of catechetical
instructions for youth and recent converts, with frag-
ments of sermons, etc.
Cyrill^ bishop of Alexandria, belongs to the fifth
century, and was a leading man of his time. He was
the chief opponent of Nestorius, and . summoned
against him the council of Ephesus in 431. Besides
his controversial works against Nestorius and others,
we have from him commentaries on John's Gospel, the
twelve minor prophets, Isaiah, and select portions of
the Pentateuch.
Dionyaius^ bishop of Rome in 252, has left three let-
ters, one particularly against the Sabellians. The works
published in the name of Dionysius the Areopagite at
Athens, a convert of Paul the apostle (Acts, xvii) are
undoubtedly spurious and belong to the fourth or fifth
century.
Dionysius^ bishop of Corinth in 170. Ancient
writers, particularly Eusebius and Jerome, have fre-
quent references to his letters, but we have none of
them entire. He was a man of great authority among
8
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114 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
the churches of his day. He died the death of a mar-
tyr in 173.
IHonyHus of Alexandria, snmamed the great, was
a scholar of Origen, was by him converted to Chris-
tianity from paganism, and became bishop in 247.
His official life was a very disturbed one. In the De-
cian persecution he suffered a long imprisonment, with
the bishop Nepos he had a controversy in regard
to the millennium in which he had the pleasure of
bringing over that bishop to his own anti-millenarian
views ; he affirmed the validity of heretic baptism, and
met with severe opposition on this account ; he wrote
against Sabellius and also against Paul of Samosata ;
during the Valerian persecution he was driven into
exile ; and after a most unquiet life he died in 2€9.
Of his numerous writings we have only fragments
remaining, which have been collected and published.
Ephraem the Syrian was born at Nisibis in Mesopo-
tamia, became abbot of the cloister in Edessa, and died
in 378. He was a voluminous writer in the Syrian
language ; his works were highly esteemed ; they were
translated into Greek and read in many churches. As
we have already observed, the text of the New Testa-
ment itself was in one instance at least obliterated to
furnish parchment for a copy of Ephraem's Sermons ;
a symbol of what has often happened in the Christian
church since his time. His works have been frequently
and very handsomely published.
jErjpiphamm was of Jewish origin, and born in a vil-
lage near Jerusalem about the year 310. After his
conversion to Christianity he became a Monk in Pales-
tine and was afterwards made bishop of Salamis in
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THE ONE HUNDRED WITNESSES. 115
the island of Cyprus. He was full of zeal against
heretics, and among his other writings is a ponderous .
work against 80 heresies. He assailed with great energy
John, bishop of Jerusalem, on account of his supposed
attachment to the principles of Origen, and endeav-
ored, though in vain, to enlist Chrysostom in his cru-
sade against Origenism. He did not begin to be an
author tiU after he was sixty, and pursued the calling
with characteristic zeal and industry till he was past
ninety. He died while returning from a long journey
which he had made in his zeal against Origenism. His
works are hasty, fiery, and full of mistakes, but valua-
ble on account of the many quotation^ which he makes
from, ancient writings now lost. For his time he w^as
a remarkable linguist, being acquainted with Hebrew,
Syrian, Egyptian, Greek and Latin. His works are to
this day easily accessible. He is a remarkable exam-
ple of zeal, industry and sincerity in heresy hunting.
His quotations from other authors are generally faith-
ful and reliable.
Eusehius^ surnamed Pamphilus^ from his friend the
martyr, was bom in Palestine in the year 264 and died
in 340. He is the most valuable of all the early church
historians, and has been perhaps sufficiently charac-
terized in the second chapter of this work. He was
bishop of Caesarea in Palestine, an amazingly diligent
reader and writer, amiable, unprejudiced and candid.
He endeavored to protect Anus against Alexander the
bishop of Alexandria, and thus incurred for himself
the suspicion of Arianism, though he subscribed the
Nicene creed ; and he was sent on an embassy to Con-
Btantine in regard to Athanasius. He became an iiti
"'O*
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116 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
mate personal friend of that celebrated emperor, and
• had a most favorable opinion of him, which is not at
all surprising considering the circumstances. His nu-
merous historical writings are still held in great esteem,
and there is nothing that can supply their place. Not-
withstanding all that partizan zeal has from time to
time alleged against him, there is no historian equally
voluminous on whom fewer errors can be proved.
There were other distinguished churchmen of the
same name, during that age, as a bishop of Emessa in
359, who published homilies, and a bishop of Ver*
celli in 371.
Evagriua Schdlasttcua was bom at Epiphania in Coel-
esyria in the year 536, and was a lawyer at Antioch.
We have from him an ecclesiastical history in 6 books
including the* period between the years 431 and 594;
a valuable work, though somewhat marred by the
credulity of the author and his faith in monkish
legends.
Firmilianus^ bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia, was
a great admirer of Origen, and he took an active part
in all the church questions of his time. We have from
him an able letter to Cyprian, in which he takes part
with that prelate against the assumptions of Stephen,
the bishop of Rome. He is referred tcT by Eusebius,
E. H. vi. 26, 29, 46 ; vii. 5, 29.
Gregory^ sumamed Thaumaturgua or Wonder Worker^
on account of the wonderful works which he is said to
have wrought, was bom of wealthy and respectable
heathen parents at New Caesarea in Pontus about the
year 210. In 231 he was on his way to Berytus in-
tending to studjjT law at the famous school in that
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THE ONE HUNDRED WITNEBSES. 117
place ; but meeting with Origen he was converted to
Christianity, and the whole purpose of his life was
changed. He studied with Origen eight years. He •
was made bishop of his native city about the year 243
or 4. At that time there- were said to be only sev-
enteen Christians in the whole city; but such was
the energy and success of his labors there, that when
he died in 270, there were scarcely so many pagans
left in the place, though a very populous one. In the
Decian persecution he was obliged to flee. Afterwards
he took part against Paul of Samosata in 269 at the
Council of AntiocL He was a diligent student of
Scripture, and a most laborious and faithful pastor.
His fame filled the North and the East, and even the
pagans called him the second Mose&
Gregory of Nazianzen^ was bom in the year 300 at
Nazianzen in Cappadocia, where his father was bishop.
He was the confidential friend of Basil the great, was
sometime bishop of Constantinople, but finally retired
to private life and died in 391. When Julian the
apostate prohibited the Christians the use of the Greek
and Roman classics, Gregory and some others endeav-
ored to fill the gap by writings of their own. In the
Arian controversy he kept the congregations at Con-
stantinople warmly engaged against the heretics. On
account of his great attainments in divinity he was
sumamed the Theologian. He published discourses,
of which there are two against Julian written with
great severity ; we have of his nearly 250 letters ; and
more than 150 poetical pieces in different kinds of verse.
His works were highly esteemed, carefully preserved,
and are still accessible in good editions.
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Gregory of Nyssa^ brother of Basil the great, was
bom at Pontus in Macedonia, was at first a rhetorician,
then a monk, and finally bishop of Nyssa. He was
exUed from his see for eight years by the Arians, and
attended both the councils of Constantinople in 381
and 394. He was highly celebrated for his eloquence
as a preacher. The time of his death is uncertain.
His writings, treatises, orations, poems, etc., are well
preserved.
Hegesippua was a Jew by birth and a member of the
Christian congregation at Jerusalem. He composed
at Rome, about the year 176, a historical work under
the title of Memoirs, which described, in 5 books, the
vicissitudes of the church of Christ from its origin to
his own time. Nothing remains of this work but the
fragments preserved by Eusebius. He died in 180. A
history of the Jewish war and the destruction of Jeru-
salem, which are ascribed to him, are not his. Euse-
bius, E. H. iii. 19, 20, 32 ; iv. 8, 22.
Heracleon^ of whom but little is known, was a disci-
ple of Valentine, about the year 126. He wrote
largely on the New Testament books, but though we
have none of his works entire, yet copious extracts are
made from them by Clement of Alexandria and Ori-
gen. Being a Gnostic, and of that very early period^
his testimony is particularly valuable.
HeracUtiLS^ in the latter part of the second century^
is mentioned by Jerome and Eusebius as an able com-
mentator on the Epistles of Paul.
H&rmas, Under this name there was in the most
ancient church, and held in the highest esteem, a book
entitled the Pastor or Shepherd. The ancients sup-
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posed the author to be the Hermas mentioned by Paul
in BonL xvi. 14. Others would ascribe it to Hermas,
a brother of Pius, bishop of Rome, about the year 156.
But the great authority of the book as early as the
time of Irenaeus (from 140 to 200) would certainly
indicate the correctness of the first opinion rather than
the second. In the work, which consists of three
books, an angel in the guise of a shepherd gives in-
structions to Herman on the various duties of the Chris-
tian life, in the form of visions, commands and simili-
tudes. It was for many ages extant in a Latin trans-
lation only, with the exception of a few sentences;
but in the famous Sinai manuscript discovered by
Tischendorf we have the original Greek of a consider-
able portion of it It is a most precious relic of the
very highest Christian antiquity.
Hemiiaa^ who lived towards the close of the second
century, while paganism was still in the ascendant and
all powerful, wrote a sharp polemic work in opposi-
tion to it, entitled Irriaio GtntiUum Philosophorum^
Ridicule of the Gentile Philosophers, which is in-
teresting as a specimen of the very earliest Christian
polemics. It is still accessible in good editions.
Steronymua (Sophrontus Eusehius) was bom in the
year 330 at Strido in Dalmatia. He was one of the
most learned of all the church fathers, particularly in
everything pertaining to the literature of the Bible.
In English we generally write his name Jerome. He
received at Rome his first instruction in the sciences,
traveled extensively, and finally withdrew to a solitude
near Bethlehem in Palestine, where he spent his life in
the study of the Scriptures and the composition of
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various learned works in the several departments of
Christian literature. He employed a Jew to teach
him Hebrew, and was a most diligent and faithful stu-
dent. His greatest work was the revising of the com-
mon Latin translation of the Bible called the Vulgate,
and writing for the several books of Scripture erudite
prefaces containing all that could be ascertained re-
specting the authors, times and occasions of writing,
etc. Even the most laborious investigations of mod-
em times have in many instances scarcely advanced
beyond the results of Jerome. Of most of the sacred
books he made new translations very much superior to
any that had preceded. His writings are among the
richest of the ancient sources of critical investigation,
there are passages in them of surpassing eloquence, he
was altogether sincere and earnest; but he always
wrote hastily, and was often passionate and prejudiced.
He had several fierce controversies with Rufinus, Au-
gustin and others ; and when excited, as he always was
almost in controversy, he did not hesitate to call his
opponents by the roughest kind of names. His wri-
tings were numerous, mainly on exegetical and his-
torical subjects ; they have been carefully preserved,
and are accessible in many good editions. He died in
420 at the age of 90.
Hilary^ called by many the Western Athancmus^
was bom in Poitiers in Aquitania, educated in pagan-
ism ; but converted to Christianity by the reading of
the Bible, he became bishop of his native city in 355.
For his opposition to Arianism he was banished to
Phrygia ; but after his return, he sought with redoubled
zeal to purify France from this heresy* He died in
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368. He wrote on the trinity, commentaries, hymns,
etc. His works are preserved with a good degree of
completeness, and have often been published in hand-
some and readable editions.
Hippolytua (Eusebius, H. E. vi. 20, 22) belongs to
the close of the second century, and was one of the
most active and influential churchmen of his day. He
was a scholar of Irenaeus and a friend of Origen. He
was bishop of Ostia at the mouth of the Tiber, and
died a martyr's death. His writings consist of com-
mentaries on the Old and New Testaments, sermons,
dogmatic and polemic treatises, historical disquisitions,
etc. His personal history was very little known even to
Eusebius and others of the earliest writers. But it has
been gradually coming to light even in modem times.
In 1551 a statue of him with an inscription giving
some account of him and his writings was disinterred
near Rome ; in 1661 a polemic work of his was dis-
covered; and in 1842, there were found in Greece
seven books, that is from the 4th to the 10th, of his
great work on all the heresies, of which only the first
book had before been known. This discovery pro-
duced a wide-spread excitement in the learned world,
and gave rise to numerous publications illustrating,
from Hippolytus, the doctrines, rites and ethics of the
ancient church.
Igrmtma^ sumamed TheopTwrus^ was a pupil of the
apostle John, and by him ordained bishop of Antioch,
which office he held forty years. He lived through
the persecution of Domitian, but in the reign of Tra-
jan he was condemned to death, and after a most re-
markable conversation with the emperor, an account
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122 THE BOOKS OF THE BIDLB.
of which ia still extaait ; he was taken to Home and
there suffered martyrdom by being thrown to wild
beasts about the year 109 (Eusebius, E. H. iii. 36).
An account of his martyrdom, written by the friends
who attended him o*n his journey, is still preserved.
While at Smyrna, and at Troas, on his way to Rome,
he wrote letters to several of the Christian churches,
and one to his friend Polycarp. These seven epistles
have been known and read in the Christian churches
from the very earliest period. There is an edition of
them of about the sixth century, which undoubtedly
contains many interpolations; but the earlier and
briefer recensions, of which archbishop Usher had a
Latin translation and I. Voss, the Greek origin.al, may
safely be received as genuine throughout. Besides
these seven there are others ascribed to Ignatius which
miy be rejected as spurious. The genuine epistles of
Ignatius are among the most interesting of all the
relics of Christian antiquity ; they have often been pub-
lished and are easily accessible.
Irenaeus was bom at Smyrna probably about the
year 120. He studied with Poly carp and Papias. He
was a missionary to the pagans in France under Pothi-
nus, from whom he received ordination ; and after the
death of his master by martyrdom, he succeeded him
as bishop of Lyons in the year 178. He was a faithful
pastor of his flock, had great influence throughout the
Christian world, and successfully withstood Victor^
bishop of Rome, in his endeavors to impose the Re*
mish Easter on other churches. He sufiered martyr-
dom under Septimius Severus in the year 202. Euse-
bius, E. H. y. 15, 20, 24, 26. He was probably the
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author of the lettei*, still extant, which gives so graphic
and terrible a description of the persecutions suffered by
the churches of Vienne and Lyons in Prance in the year
177. His great work is his five books against heresies,
which is still extant, partly in the original Greek, but
mostly in a very ancient and rather barbarous Latin
translation. The work contains a great amount of in-
formation as to the origin, doctrines and character of
the ancient heretics ; as well as of the theological tenets
of the orthodox churches of that age, and the most
approved mode of stating and defending them. The
book is a very common one.
IsOLcyrm^ the son of the Gnostic Basilides, wrote
works both of an exegetical and ethical character, of
Avhich fragments are preserved by Clement of Alcxan-
dria and Epiphanius.
IsidoTua of Alexandria, sumamed Peluaiota^ a monk
of Pelusium, was distinguished for his abstemious and
severe life. He belongs to the latter part of the fourth
century, and has left over two thousand letters arranged
in five books.
Jerome^ see Hieronymue.
Jomandea or Jordanea^ a Goth, was before his conver-
sion a notary, then a monk, and finally a bishop about the
year 550. His works are historical, and contain im-
portant testimonies-
Josephua (^Flavius)^ the great historian of the Jews,
born at Jerusalem in the year 37, son of a priest, and
of the sect of the Pharisees, In the Roman war he
held with great distinction the Jewish military com-
mand in Galilee ; but being defeated and made a pris-
oner by Vespasian, he became an intimate friend of
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the emperor and his son, and was employed by Titus
as a negotiator with the Jews in the siege of Jerusalem.
His last years were spent at Rome. His works are
well known. His testimonies to Christ and the early
history of Christianity have by some been rejected as
spurious, but without sufficient reason.
Julius Africanua (Eusebius, E. H. i. 7 ; vi. 31) was
by birth a Lybian, and dwelt at Emmaus in Palestine,
and he is by some called bishop of Emmaus, which is
the same as Nicopolis. When the city was destroyed
by fire about the year 220, Julius was sent on an em-
bassy to the emperor Heliogobalus to have it rebuilt
He was a man of great learning and influence, and has
left some important writings, though now mostly in
fragments. His letter to Aristides on the genealogies
in Matthew and Luke, and a letter to Origen on the
genuineness of the story of Susanna in the Greek
Daniel, we have entire; but of his great historical
summary from the creation to A. D. 221, and an elab-
orate treatise on natural science and medicine, only
fragments remain.
Justin (Flaviua^ the Martyr) was bom at Neapolis,
the ancient Shechem, in the beginning of the 2d cen-
tury. From his early youth he had an intense longing
to acquire a knowledge of divine things. He gave him-
self to the study of philosophy, and attended the instruc-
tions of a Stoic, a Peripatetic, and Pythagorean, but with-
out obtaining satisfaction. With a Platonist he succeeded
better ; but once as he was taking a solitary walk, ab-
sorbed in meditation, he was met by a venerable old
man who referred him to the writings of the prophets
and apostles and the instructions of Christ. A dili-
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gent study of the Bible, and a witnessing of the stead-
fastness of the Christians under the most severe perse-
cutions, brought him over to Christianity. He thence-
forward devoted himself to a defence of the Christian
faith, and especially to a vindication of it to the men
of learning among the pagans. For this purpose he
always retained the philosopher's mantle, and went to
Rome and founded a school there. Through the
malice of a certain Cynic by the name of Crescens he
sufiFered a martyr's death at Rome in the year 167.
Justin is the first of the church fathers, whose writings
have come down to us, that brings Christianity into
connection with philosophy ; and he was followed as a
model by subsequent defenders of the faith. His
larger apology was addressed to the emperor Anto-
ninus Pius about the year 139, and the smaller to Mar-
cus Aurelius in l63 or thereabouts. In both these
works the argument is addressed mainly to the pagans.
For the Jews he wrote a dialogue which he professes
to have held with Trypho, a Jew, while walking in
the gymnasium or Xystus at Ephesus. As to the gen-
uineness of these works there can be no reasonable
doubt
There is a very ancient letter to Diognetus, giving
an account, minute and interesting, of the opinions
and practices of the Christians of the earlier period,
that has sometimes been ascribed to Justin the Martyr,
but without sufficient grounds. It is a genuine and
most valuable relic of the earliest Christian age, and
its statements are authentic and of the deepest interest,
but the author is unknown.
Lactantitis (^Gaectliua Firmianiui), an Italian or Afri-
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can, a pupil of Amobius in eloquence ; but he so fai^
surpassed his teacher that he gained for himself the
title of the Christian Cicero. He devoted himself to
the iubtruction of youth, and was appointed by Con-
stantine the Great the tutor of his son Crispus in the
year 317. He died about 325. His principal work
k his Institutes in seven books. His works have been
highly esteemed, and frequently and handsomely pub-
lished. The language, generally, is more noticeable
than the thought.
Lucian^ of Samosata in Syria, an Epicurean philoso-
pher and distinguished orator of the second half of
the second century. He traveled extensively and
learned much- of the follies of mankind. In his dia-
logues, which have had a great run, he ridiculed with
much sharpness and wit the sacred things of the pa-
gans, and did not spare the Christians. Much can be
learned from this merciless satirist, whose works are
too congenial to the ill nature of mankind ever to be
lost or become obsolete.
Manes or ifant, the founder of the Manichaeans,
was bom in the early part of the third century. He
was a Persian, educated among the Magi, and on be-
coming acquainted with the Chtistinn books, combined
the Christian doctrines with the Magian, gave himself
out for the Paraclete or Comforter promised by Christ,
and founded a new system of religion, which embraced
some of the ideas of Christ, but was characterized by
the old Zoroastrian dogma of dualism, or two original
principles of light and dairkness, of good and evil, in
perpetual and everlasting conflict. Being an artist as
well as z philosopher he composed a work illustrative
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of his system, which he adorned with splendid pic-
tures, and it was called by the Persians ErtenkiMani^
or the Gospel of Manes. He traveled extensively,
wrote other works, and had numerous followers. Hor-
misdas, king of Persia, was among his converts. But
the next king, Varanes L put him to a most cruel death
as a perverter of religion in the year 277 ; but for many
generations afterwards his followers were numerous and
influential, among whom was the great Augustin in
the early part of his life. Extracts from the writings
of this most remarkable and erratic genius are pre-
served by Epiphanius.
Mardon was born at Sinope, where his father was
bishop, early in the second ceiitury. He visited Rome
and was there acquainted with Justin Martyr and Val-
entinus the Gnostic. He became the founder of an
anti-Jewish Gnostic sect, which as late as the fourth
century had its own churches and bishops. He rejected
the Old Testament and compiled, mainly from Luke,
a gospel of his own, which is still extant He received
as divinely inspired ten of the epistles of Paul, and is
a good witness for all the New Testament books as
they were received by the Orthodox churches of his
time. He regarded Matthew, Mark and John as Judur
izers, who failed to comprehend the doctrine of the
good God as expounded by Jesus of Nazareth ; but
recognized as genuine the Gospels ascribed to them.
He was himself a believer in the dualism of the Per-
sians, as was Manes also a century afterward. Consid-
ering the history and condition of the world from the
beginning to the present time, it is rather surprising
that this solution of the great problem of the existence
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128 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
of moral and physical evil, has not been more popular
among theologians of modem times. It held great
sway over the minds of many of the profoundest
thinkers of the old Oriental world, and was exten-
sively received for many ages after Christ.
Marcus^ a native of Palestine and a disciple of Val-
entinus, belongs to the second half of the second cen-
tury. He set forth his Gnostic doctrines in a poem, a
liturgy, and symbols. Irenaeus, in his first book against
heretics, gives an account of him and his writings,
from which it appears that he is a good witness for the
books of the New Testament, especially for the first
three Gospels.
Maximus^ a writer against the Gnostics, was cotempo-
rary with Marcus above mentioned, and probably the
bishop of Jerusalem. He is mentioned by Eusebius,
E. H. V. 27, and quoted by him in his other works as
a witness to the four Gospels. John and Matthew,
Mark and Luke, four evangelists (he says) but one
Gospel.
Melito^ bishop of Sardis, about 160, was one of the
most active and influential of the church fiitthers of his
time. A good account of him and his writings is
given by Eusebius, E. H. iv. 26. He traveled to Pal-
estine for the purpose of ascertaining exactly the He-
brew canon of Scripture, and to him we are indebted
for the earliest Christian catalogue of the books of the
Old Testament
Methodius^ bishop of Tyre in Phoenicia, or Patara
in Lycia, probably was martyred in the Diocletian
persecution about the year 311. Several of his wri-
tings are preserved ; and we have extracts in Epipha
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niiis and Photins and John of Damascus. He was a
zealous opponent of Origen.
Minucius Felix^ a lawyer and advocate at Rome,
probably of African origin, and converted to Chris-
tianity about 225. His writings are important as wit-
nessing to our sacred books, and have been often pub*
lished.
Montanua^ a native of Mysia on the borders of Phry-
gia, in the second half of the second century, was the
founder of the sect of Montanists, in connection with
the two female preachers Priscilla and Maximilla. He
was a Millenarian of the most advanced type, and ex-
ceedingly severe and ascetic in his rules of life. Epiph-
anius gives us extracts from his writings.
Nepo8 was bishop of Arsinoe in Egypt about the
year 244. He at first wrote in defence of the most
literal conception of the millennium, but being con-
vinced of his error by Dionysius, bishop of Alexan-
dria, he frankly and fully retracted. Besides his works
on the millennium he was the author of psalms and
hymns for the use of the churches.
Nilua^ a praefect in Constantinople, was afterwards
with his son Theodulus a monk on Mount Sinai, where
he died in the year 450. He gave a narrative of the
slaughter of the monks on Mount Sinai and the cap-
tivity of Theodulus, and wrote treatises of general
interest.
Oecumenius^ was a Greek writer, who compiled com-
mentaries on the greater part of the New Testament,
collected out of the writings of the ancients, and there-
fore valuable to us. He probably lived in the tenth
century ; and we still have quite complete his works on
the Acts and the Epistles.
9
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Origen^ sumamed Adamantiua^ son of Leonides the
martyr, was born at Alexandria in Egypt in the year
135. He was educated at the catechetic school in his
native city, under Clement, and received instruction
also from the philosopher Ammonius Saccus. After
the death of his father he supported his mother and
her family by teaching; and at the age of eighteen
became master of the celebrated Alexandrian cate-
chetic school in which he had himself been instructed
At this time, from misunderstanding the passage in
Matthew xix. 12, he did violence to his own person.
Subsequently he made a journey to Rome ; in his twen-
ty-fifth year he made himself master of the Hebrew
language, and was sent to Arabia to instruct an emir
in the Christian faith. After his return, the rage of
Caracalla against the Alexandrians compelled him to
flee to Palestine, and he publicly expounded the Scrip-
tures in Caesarea. Recalled by Demetrius, bishop of
Alexandria, he in Antioch became the teacher of Mam-
maea, the mother of Alexander Severus ; again he spent
a few years in Alexandria ; on a journey to Greece was
ordained presbyter ; on which account his bishop De-
metrius was enraged against him, accused him of heret-
ical opinions, and summoned church councils which
condemned and banished him. Origen then opened
a school at Caesarea ; in the Severian persecution he
fled to Cappadocia ; and when quiet was again restored,
he visited Athens, Palestine and Bostra, where he found
Beryll and converted him from his errors. In the De-
cian persecution he was imprisoned and put to the tor-
ture, and soon after his release he died at Tyre in the
year 254 at the age of sixty-nine. Origen was one
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THE OKE HUNDRED WITNESSES. 131
of the most wonderful men that any age or country
has ever produced. Sincere, earnest, indefatigable,
prolific, his numerous writings are among the richest
treasures which Christian antiquity has left to us ; and
no witness to the sacred books is more trustworthy,
copioua and important than he.
FamphiluSy a presbyter, was bom at Berytus (Bei-
rut) in Phoenecia, devoted himself to the study of the-
ology^ and made his home at Csesarea in Palestine in
the latter part of the third century. Here he employed
his large fortune in the collecting of a Christian library,
9Jxd copied many books, which it was impossible other-
wise to procure, with his own hand, as for example the
voluminous writings of Origen. This library was of
invaluable benefit to Eusebius and Jerome, and other
Christian writers. He also founded a Christian school
in the same city, of which he was himself the teacher.
Under the emperor Maximin, in the year 307, he was
thrown into prison, and two years after put to death.
His life was written by Eusebius. He published an
edition of the Septuagint according to the revision of
Origen, which was much used in Palestine and Syria,
and an apology for Origen in six books, in conjunction
with Eusebius. The Euthalian sections or chapters in
the book of Acts are probably from him.
Pantaenus of Sicily, of the second century, was at
first a Stoic, and was converted to Christianity by a
disciple of the apostles. He became master of the
catechetic school at Alexandria, where he acquired
a great reputation, and had some very distinguished
scholars, as for example the Alexandrian Clement. He
had been for a considerable time before this a preacher
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132 TH£ BOOKB OF THE BIBLE.
of the Gospel in India, and died at Alexandria in the
year 212. He was the author of commentaries on the
Scripture. He found in India certain Jewish Chris-
tians who had the Gospel of Matthew in Hebrew,
which had been left them by their teacher, the apostle
Bartholomew. See Eusebius, E. H. v. 10.
Papias^ bishop of Hierapolis in Phrygia about the
year 100, according to Irenaeus and other ancients, a
student of both the apostle John and of Polycarp, was a
aealous millenarian, learning his doctrine, as he says,
from the apostle John himself. Eusebius, E. H. iii. 39.
He wrote five books containing traditional accounts of
Christ, the apostles, and others of the primitive times.
Fragments only of his works remain. Though a man
of moderate mtellectual capacity, he was evidently
entirely honest and sincere, and a good witness in
regard to the sacred books of his time.
Philastriua^ a native of Spain or Italy, at first a
presbyter, in which capacity he traveled through the
whole Roman empire, laboring for the conversion of
heretics and pagans, and finally became bishop of
Brescia in the time of Ambrose. He died in 389.
He was a zealous defender of the Nicene creed, and
wrote a book concerning heretics, which is still extant,
in character much like that of Epiphanius, already
noticed.
Photius was at first chief secretary to the emperor
at Constantinople, and then, in the year 850, was raised
by Bardas, the uncle of the emperor Michael L, to the
metropolitan see of Constantinople, in which office he
Made open schism with the church of Rome. He was
twice deposed and as often reinstated. He died in
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891. He was the most learned of the Greek ecclesias-
tics of his time, and his writings numerous and valua-
ble are still preserved Especially worthy of notice
is his Mv^t(iUo¥ or Bibliotheca, containing extracts from
280 ancient works read by him, most of which are
now lost. It is quite common with a certain class of
Protestant writers to date the papal anti-Christ from
the schism with Photiu&
Polycarp^ a disciple of St. John, and by him or-
dained bishop of Smyrna. Of his family and native
country nothing is known. He held his office for a long
period, living on the most intimate terms with Ignatius,
bishop of Antioch, visited on business of the church
the bishop Anicetus at Rome, where he gave a
sharp reproof to Marcion. He took Irenaeus under
his instruction; and in the reign of Marcus Aure-
lius was condemned to death, between the years
164 and 168. The church at Smyrna gave a most
affecting account of his death and his beautiful confes-
sion at the stake in a letter to the churches of Pontus,
which is preserved by Eusebius (E. H. iv. 15), and
has been published in full by archbishop Usher. He
wrote a letter Co the Philippians, which is for the most
part still extant. Some answers to Biblical questions are
ascribed to him, in regard to the genuineness of which
serious doubts have been raised.
Poly crates^ bishop of Ephesus about the year 196,
wrote a synodical letter in the name of the bishop of
his province to Victor of Rome, in which he resisted
the assumptions of the Roman bishop, and affirmed
that Easter ought to be celebrated on the 14th day of
the month Nisan. Fragments of this letter are pre-
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134 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
served by Eusebius, R H. iii. 31, v. 24, which gare
important testimony to the Gospels.
Polycarp^ the celebrated philosopher of the new
Platonic school, was born at Batanea in Syria, in the
year 233. He was at first, it is said, a Christian, bnt
afterwards apostatized and wrote an elaborate work in
fifteen books against Christianity. The book itself is
now lost, but copious extracts from it are given by
Eusebius and Jerome. He quotes in these fragments,
from Matthew, Mark, and John, also from the Acts or
the Galatians. He assails the contents of the New
Testament books, but never their genuineness. See
Eusebius, E. H. vi. 19.
Ptohmy was a Gnostic, a disciple of Valentinus,
about the year 150, of whom we have several frag-
ments preserved by Epiphanius, giving important tea*
timony to the New Testament books.
Bufinua Tyrannvua^ from Concordia in Italy, was a
fellow student with Jerome in the monastery at Aqui-
leia, where he was baptized. He lived for a long tnno
in the East, principally in Egypt, and was a presbyter
in the church at Jerusalem. He was an admirer of
Origen, and on this account had a quarrel with Jerome,
which, after a brief reconciliation, broke out anew
after Rufinus had returned to Rome and translated
some of the writings of Origen, and became exces-
sively bitter. When Rome was conquered by Alaric
the Goth, he fled to Messina, where he died in the year
410. Besides his translations from Origen, he gave a
Latin translation of the Ecclesiastical History of Euse-
bius and a continuation of it, translations from several
of the Greek figtthers, apologies for Origen, and other
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THB ONE HUNDRED WITNESSES. 135
original worka His translations are very free and not
altogether trustworthy, but his writings are valuable
as testimonie&
Serapion was the successor of Theophilus in the
bishopric of Antioch in the year 190. By an extract
from one of his letters preserved by Eusebius (E. H.
vi 12), we see how careful the primitive churches
were in respect to receiving books which claimed to
be of apostolic origin, and how watchful they were to
preserve the purity of the New Testament canon.
Socrates^ a lawyer of Constantinople, was born in
the year 380. He wrote in seven books an ecclesias-
tical history from the time of Constantine to the year
439. It is the best of the historical writings of that
period. He and also Sozomen bore the surname of
Scholaaticus^ an honorary title indicating the esteem in
which they were held.
Sozomen Salamanes Eiermtas^ was also a lawyer of
Constantinople, and was living in the year 446. He
also wrote in nine books a church history from 324 to
439 ; a more vivacious work than that of Socrates,
but hardly so reliable.
Tatian was by birth a Syrian, but well instructed in
the sciences of the Greeks. At Rome he became ac-
quainted with the abominations of the secret doc-
trines of the heathen ; and after studying the Scrip-
tures in company with Justin Martyr, with whose
school he was for a long time connected, he made open
profession of the Christian faith. He as well aS Justin
was persecuted by Crescens. Tatian withdrew to the
East, and there fell into certain Gnostic and especially
Valentinian errors, taught dualism and doceticwm^ bfe-
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136 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
came excessively austere, and was the founder of the
Encratites, who rejected even marriage as unchaste.
He died about the year 190. We have from him an
oration against the Greeks, written before he left the
orthodox churcL He here attacks the Greek philoso-
phers, and asserts that they had learned all their wis-
dom from the barbarians, and that the doctrine tr8^ns-
mitted from the Hebrews to the Christians was the
only true philosophy. He even in this treatise shows
a strong tendency towards the Gnosticism which he
subsequently advocated openly. His Harmony of the
Gospels is lost, though some account of it is given by
Eusebius, E. H. iv. 29, and also by Theodoret and
Clement of Alexandria, and he is alluded to also by
Irenaeus. His testimony to the Gospels, as given by
his Harmony, is of great value, as is abundantly seen
from the statements of those who had read it. A
writer of the twelfth century, Dionysius Bar Salibi,
testifies that the Harmony of Tatian began with the
first words of John's Gospel, In the beginning was ihe
Word.
TertulUan (^Qumtua Septimivs Fhreifia) was bom at
Carthage about the year 160, and is the oldest of the
Latin church fathers whose writings have reached us.
He devoted himself at first to the study of the Ro-
man law, but after his conversion to Christianity he
was ordained presbyter, but whether at Carthage or
Rome is uncertain. From this time with much learn-
ing and a fiery zeal he assailed Jews, heathens and
heretics, in a series of energetic treatises. His own
severe and fiery nature, and perhaps also the many
annoyances which he suffered from the Roman preshy-
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THE ONE HUNDRED WITNESSES. 137
ters, induced him, about the year 203^ to join the Mon-
tanists ; but he held their principles with moderation,
and from this time onward he directed many sharp and
energetic writings against the Romish church. He
died, aa some say, about the year 220, or, according
to others, as late as 240. He writes in a peculiar and
very diflBcult Latin style, but with rhetorical skill and
great force and fire. His writings are numerous and
have been well preserved and published very often.
They are apologetic, polemic and practical Being so
numerous and diversified and written so near the apos-
tolic age, by one who had been educated a Roman
lawyer, and who was the son of a Roman soldier of
proconsular rank, their testimony to the New Testament
books is exceedingly interesting and important. His
chief book, his Apology against the Gentiles, was ad-
dressed to the Roman governors in Africa ; in his book
on the testimony of the soul his object is to show that
Christianity is founded in the nature of man. He
wrote two books on marriage addressed to his own
wife, in which he sets forth the principles that should
govern Christian men and women in their domestic
relations ; also a work to show that Christians ought
not to attend the games and spectacles of the pagans ;
another in defence of & Christian soldier who refused
to wear the military garland ; one to show that Chris-
tians should take no part in the construction of images
or other implements of idolatry ; an exhortation to
chastity to a widow against a second marriage ; a book
to show that both married women and virgins should
remain veiled in church ; one against female exiravr--
gance in dress ; one in defense of himself for putting
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138 THB BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
off the Eoman toga and assuming the philospher^s
mantle ; and on various other topics.
Theodoret^ the only son of pious parents, was bom
at Antioch about the year 390. He was educated at
a neighboring monastery, where he^was associated with
Chrysostom and Nestorius, In 420 he was ordained
bishop of Cyrus in Syria, and is said to have had the
superintendence of 800 churches. The country was
overrun with Marcionites and anti-trinitarian sects ; but
such was his zeal and tact that he brought almost all
of them into the communion of the orthodox church,
having himself, as he says, baptized not less than ten
thousand Marcionites. In 431 he took the part of
Nestorius, his early fiiend, against Cyrill, and for this
he was excommunicated in 449, but was restored to
the communion of the church by Leo, bishop of Home ;
and after he had at Chalcedon, in 451, publicly recanted
and given his vote against Nestorius, he was reinstated
in his bishopric. From this time he devoted himself
to writing till his death in 457. He left a commentary
on most of the books of the Old Testament, and on
all the Epistles of Paul, and a church history in con-
tinuation of Eusebius to the year 427, besides several
other works and nearly two hundred letters. His
writings are among the best which that age produced ;
they have been well preserved and handsomely pub-
lished in good and readable editiona
Theodotus^ a learned tanner of Byzantium, about
the year 192, fled from persecution there and took
refuge at Rome. Since he had denied Christ in that
persecution for the sake of saving his own life, he was
excommunicated by Victor, bishop of Rome. He
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THE ONB HUNDRED WITNESSES. 139
then taught that Christ was a mere man, and this led
him of course to reject the Gospel of John. He was
welcomed among the Montanists. A considerable por-
tion of one of his works, containing important testi-
monies to the books of the New Testament, is still in
good preservation among the writings of Clement of
Alexandria.
Tkeophilvs was the sixth bishop of Antioch, about
the year 168. He was heathen or Saducee, but by the
reading of the Scriptures was brought to acknowledge
the truth of Christianity and devote himself to the
Christian ministry. Some account is given of him by
Eusebius, E. H. iv. 20, 24. He wrote against Hermo-
genes, against Marcion, and a commentary on the four
Gospels. These writings are lost. But we have from
him three books in vindication of Christianity, addressed
to his pagan friend Autolycus. He takes much the
same views as Justin Martyr. The three days of crea-
tion preceding the appearance of the sun and moon
he regards as typical of the trinity (j^^a^i) of God,
the earliest mention which we have of the word trinity.
The account of vegetables springing up from the seeds
te considers typical of the resurrection of our bodies,
an idea which he might have borrowed from St. Paul.
Titua^ bishop of Bostra in Arabia, suffered persecu-
tion under Julian the apostate, and in the reign of
Jovian attended the Synod of Antioch, in the year
363. His three books against the Manichaeans are
still extant.
Valentinu^^ the celebrated Gnostic, was by birth an
Egyptian, probably of Jewish origin, and educated at
Alexandria, about the year 120. Tertullian says he
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140 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
forsook the Christian church because he was not made
a bishop. He formed a Gnostic system of his own,
which he zealously propagated in the city of Rome,
where he lived till the bishopric of Anicetus. His
most celebrated disciples were Heracleon, Ptolemy,
Mark, and Bardesanes. A gospel of his own, which
he and his followers used, they called the gospel of
truth. Several quotations from him, containing im-
portant testimonies to our sacred books, are made by
the church fathers, especially by Irenaeus. Some
account of him is given by Eusebius, E. H. iv. 11.
He cites all the Gospels, but gives the preference to
John, and was familiar also with the writings of Paul.
Vtctarimia^ bishop of Pettau in Steiermark, towards
the end of the third century, suffered martjrdom un-
der Diocletian, in the year 303. He wrote commenta-
ries on almost all the books of Scripture, of which only
fragments remain. There is still extant a commentary
on the Apocalypse ascribed to hinu
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CHAPTER FIFTH.
TESTIMONY FOR THE HISTORICAL BOOKS OP THE KEW '
TESTAMENT.
Each book of the New Testament is a distinct work
by itself; as to the examination of its claims each
must stand independent of all the rest, and the evi-
dence of each must be separately investigated. Before
proceeding, however, to this individual examination,
there are some general considerations which should be
continually kept in mind.
Those books, and those only, were regarded by the
primitive Christians as a part of their New Testament
canon which were written either by an apostle or by
an associate of an apostle with apostolic superintend-
ence and sanction. The authority of an inspired apos-
tle was the only authority for a sacred book.
The four Gospels which we have, and these only,
have always been acknowledged and quoted by Chris-
tians and heretics, Jews and pagans, as the authoritative
books of the Christian church. Other gospels have ex-
isted, and heretics have claimed for them equal or supe-
rior authority to those which we regard as authentic ;
but it has never been pretended that the Christian
church has acknowledged any other gospels as canon-
ical.
Very generally the Gospels have been arranged in
the order in which we now have them, which is prob-
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142 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
ably the order of time in which they were written ; but
many ancient authorities put John immediately after
Matthew, thus placing the two apostolic Gospels to-
gether.
The origin of the Gospels, according to the best
circumstantial evidence that we can obtain, seems
to have been this : The apostles preached Christy that
is, they told their hearers who Christ was, what he
had done, and taught, and suffered; and explained
the connection between the life and death of Jesus and
the religious welfare of mankind. As was customary
in ancient times, when books were rare and sold at an •
exorbitant price, many of their hearers took notes of
their discourses, and sent copies of them to their
fiiends. These notes, necessarily imperfect, without
authority, and sometimes perhaps contradictory, were
widely circulated. To prevent confusion and mistake
the evangelists were divinely directed to write and
publish authentic narratives, for the instruction of their
contemporaries and posterity.
Luke refers to these prior accounts, which had been
written and circulated, in chapter i. v. 1, of his Gospel :
" Forasmuch as many have taken in hand to set forth
in order," etc. " Many " can not refer to Matthew and
Mark, who had written before him ; for two could
hardly be styled " many ; " and in verse 4, Luke says
he wrote, that the "certainty," respecting the Saviour,
might be known. Now if Matthew and Mark had
been referred to in the word " many," there would
have been no need of writing another account, as they
were credible and inspired writers as well as Luke,
and the " certainty " could have been learned from
them as well as from him.
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HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE N. TEST. 143
The first three are called the Synoptic Ooepele^ because
on account of their similarity, they can be taken
together in one view and thus aflFord a sort of harmon-
ized narrative of the life of Christ.
Those books and those only were regarded by the
primitive Christians as of canonical authority, which
were written by apostles, or by the companions of the
apostles under apostolic superintendence.
The question in regard to the canonical authority
of any book, therefore, was a question of simple fact,
in respect to which the churches at that time had every
opportunity of forming a correct judgment. Most of
the churches were personally acquainted with several
of the apostles ; and every one of the writers of the
New Testament was personally known to many of the
churchea
The churches from which the books of the New
Testament proceeded, were situated around the shores
of the Mediterranean sea, from Egypt, through Pales-
tine, Asia Minor and Greece, to Italy ; and through these
countries, in consequence of the extensive military
operations of the Roman empire and the roads estab-
lished for the convenience of the soldiery, and the
glory of Rome and the preservation of her power,
communication was then easy and frequent. These
churches were engaged in a great and common cause,
in the prosecution of which they were obliged to en-
counter obloquy and persecution of the severest kind ;
and naturally they became strongly attached to each
other, and the more intimately connected the more
they were separated from the rest of the world. Thus
we find them relieving each other's necessities by char-
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144 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
itable contributions (Acts xi. 29 ; 1 Cor. xvi. 1-3 ;
2 Cor. viii. 1 ; Gal. ii. 10). Ministers and church mem-
bers traveling, were recommended by one church to
another: (Acts xviii. 27 ; Rom. xvL 1, 2 ; 2 Cor. iii, 1 ;
Col. iv. 10). Churches sent friendly salutations to one
another (2 Cor. xiiL 1 ; Phil. iv. 22). Apostolic wri-
tings were sent from one church to another (Col. iv.l6).
The churches so intimately connected, so frequently
visited by different apostles, and teachers, and church
members, and continually sending their sacred writings
from one to another, could not be deceived as to what
were apostolic books, and what were not. It would be
perfectly easy to ascertain, in respect to any production,
whether an apostle composed it or superintended its
composition. If this were the case, the book was
received as of canonical authority ; if not, its claims
to such authority were rejected.
It would have been impossible to impose upon
these churches spurious books, as the writings of the
apostles or apostolic men, during their lifetime, or the
lifetime of the members of the churches who had been
acquainted with them. Such deception, every one
knows, would be impossible now. No one could write
a letter to the churches of the United States or Great
Britain, or any of the countries of Europe, and affix
to it the name of any well known living preacher, as
Spurgeon, or of one recently deceased, as bishop
Whately, without exposing himself to immediate de-
tection. Deception would have been equally impos-
sible then ; for communication was then equally easy
and frequent between the several places where churches
were situated, and the connection between the churches
was still more intimate then than it is now.
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HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE N. TEST. 145
The canonical books were kept in a sacred deposi-
tory in the churches, as the manuscript rolls of the
Old Testament are still kept by the Jews in their syn-
agogues ; and they were read in course every Lord's
day as a part of the regular religious service. Books
written by those who were not apostles or apostolic
deputies, as Clemens Romanus, Ignatius, Polycarp, and
otliers, were also occasionally t^ead in public on the
Lord's day, for the instruction of the congregation ;
as ministers now sometimes read occasional communica-
tions from the pulpit. But the reading of these books
did not make a part of the regular religious service,
and they were not taken up till after the customary
reading of the canonical Scriptures had closed.*
The internal and circumstantial evidence confirms
the judgment of the ancient churches respecting the
canonical authority of these books.
1. The contents of the books agree in every respect
with what we know from other sources concerning the
history of those times ; and nothing can be detected
in them inconsistent with their claims to authenticity.
They exhibit no marks of a later composition ; and
the characteristic peculiarities of style by which the
several books are distinguished from each other, give
evidence of their genuineness.
2. The dialect in which these books are written, is
a convincing proof of their genuineness. They are
written in a Hebraistic Greek, which was used chiefly
by Jews of the first century, and went into very general
disuse before the close of the third century. These
books, then, if they are forgeries, must have been
*Cave*8 Primitive Christianity, Part I. Chnp. 9.
10
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146 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
forged during the lives of the men to whom they are
ascribed, or very soon after their death; and it is
utterly incredible that such forgeries should ever have
gained general credit.
These books, if written by the apostles, or with apos-
tolic superintendence and sanction, are worthy of be-
lief, simply as books written by capable and honest
men, setting aside all questions in regard to divine
inspiration and authority,
CREDIBILITY OF THE GOSPELS.
I do not here touch the question of the inspiration
or divine authority of the Gospels; but simply the
credibility of the writers as men — as men capable and
honest, or incapable and dishonest. Their claims to
inspiration will be considered in another place. As
evidence of their credibility we observe,
1. They were well qualified to give testimony re-
specting all the facts which they relate ; for three of
them, Matthew, Mark, and John, were eyewitnesses of
the transactions which they record, and Luke made
himself acquainted with the facts by a diligent inves-
tigation of the whole subject. Their manner of wri-
ting, and all that we know respecting them, proves
that they were men of capacity and discernment suflfi-
cient to make them competent judges of all the cir-
cumstances which they relate.
2. They give every proof of the most perfect sim*
plicity and honesty. They impartially narrate their
own faults and the faults of their brethren ; when, perse-
cuted and defamed as Jhey were, it would have been very
natural for men in their situation to endeavor to palli-
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HISTORICAL B00K8 OF THE N. TEST. 147
ate each other's fiulings. They expose all their own
weaknesses ; when, if they had been impostors, it would
have been greatly for their interest to have concealed
them. They record with singular fidelity the severe
rebukes which they received from their master for
their timidity, forgetfulness, thoughtlessness and unbe-
lief (compare Matt xxvi 69 ; Mark vi. 49-52 ; viii.
14r-21 ; Luke xxiv. 25, and many other passages).
What stronger proof of honesty is it possible to
require ?
3. They changed their whole mode of life in con-
sequence of their belief of the facts which they stated,
and endured all manner of suflfering in attestation of
their truth. They themselves certainly believed that
the things of which they testified, had actually oc-
curred ; and these facts were of such a nature, and
such were the circumstances of the case, that the wit-
nesses could not have believed them, unless they had
actually taken place.
4. If their statements had not been true, the false-
hood could have been easily detected ; — for they were
continually surrounded by bitter enemies who were
ceaselessly watchfril to seize upon every advantage to
hinder their progress. The Jews from all parts of the
world were continually coming to Judea, with full op-
portunity to learn everything that occurred there, and
to report it when they returned to their homes. But
the principal facts of the gospel history, instead of
being denied, wer5 admitted by its enemies ; and Judas
himself, who had been intimate with the disciples, en-
joyed their confidence, and partaken in all their coun-
aels, and who had every inducement to excuse his own
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148 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
baseness by alleging crime against him whom he had
betrayed, offered no such vindication of himself, but
acknowledged that he had sinned and betrayed the
innocent, and gave proof of the reality of his remorse
and the depth of his wretchedness by violently destroy-
ing his own life. What stronger testimony • can we
have to the innocency of Jesus and the integrity of
the gospel history ?
5. It is impossible that the pharacter of Jesus should
be a fiction, invented by such men as the writers of
the New Testament. Their education, character, cir-
cumstances, everything precludes the idea of their pos-
sessing the ability or the inclination to conceive and
delineate such a character, unless they had actually
seen it exhibited before their eyes. Where in that
corrupt age, where in all the history of the world,
could they have found a model on which to form so
grand, so perfect an idea? And if a model, or even
the nucleus of such a character, had existed, how werq
poor, unlettered publicans and fishermen to learn the
skill to fashion and exhibit it with such beauty and
effect?
A character possessing every virtue, without any of
the corresponding failings, towards which, in imperfect
human nature, each virtue leans — courage without
rashness, humility without meanness, dignity trithout
arrogance, perseverance without obstinacy, affection
without weakness — always acting in exact consistency,
and never ruffled by anger or depressed by despair,
in all the severe and aggravating trials through which
he passed. How could they draw such a character
except from the living person ? And who could this
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HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE N. TEST. 149
person have been, if not he who came down from
heaven ? How short was his stay upon earth ! scarcely
three years of public life, and yet how glorious, how
permanent the results! A world disenthralled, cor-
rupting and debasing superstitions overthrown, men
placed in circumstances of improvement by which they
are continually advancing their social and public wel--
fare; and now, nearly two thousand years after his
death, while other founders of religious systems of
more recent origin have already lost their hold on the
human mind, the influence of Jesus of Nazareth is yet
young and fresh, and more extensive and powerful than
it has ever been before ; still increasing and strength-
ening and brightening, evidently to go on till the aflFec-*
tions of every human heart shall be gained, and every
tongue shall confess him Lord ! Has all this grown
out of a fiction contrived by the poor fishermen of
Galilee?
Another consideration of great importance, to be
taken in connection with the exalted moral perfection
of Jesus, and the wonderful good sense which charac-
terizes his teachings, is the coolness and calmness and
quiet assurance with which he makes the most astound-
ing claims, which, if made by any human being would
be absurd, revolting and preposterous in the extreme.
For example, his discourse at Capernaum, John vi. 32
-65, and also many other passages of similar import,
necessarily imply that if Jesus were not the Divine
Person he claimed to be, he was the most raving of
fanatics, a supposition entirely inconsistent with the
whole course of his life and every trait of his personal
character.
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150 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
It is tnie that these expressions are metaphorical ;
but let us look at them closely.
" Whoso eatetJi my fiesh and drtnketh my bloody hath
eternal life.
For my flesh is meat indeed and my blood la drink
indeed. He that eateth me, even he shall livb by
ME."
These metaphors are so strange, so uncouth,
and so intensely abhorent, especially to all Hebrew
conceptions and ideas, that when used before a Jew-
ish assembly by a teacher so sober, so clear-headed,
, so full of practical common sense as the Lord Jesus,
and repeated over and over again in continuous sen-
tences, notwithstanding the offence which they very
naturally gave, they certainly must indicate an idea
utterly remote from the common range of human
thought, unparalleled, and hitherto in human language
unexpressed, — and all this occurs in the assertion of a
claim peculiar to himself, a property which no other
being in the universe, except himself, has or can have.
CHARACTER OP THE GOSPELS. GENERAL REMARKS.
One of the first remarks we make on examining the
Four Gospels is, that while the first three have a strik-
ing general resemblance to each other, the fourth is
altogether peculiar, frequently in the substance of the
narrative itself and always in the mode of narrating.
So marked is this peculiarity of John, that the simple
enunciation of a single sentence from his gospel strikes
the ear in a way that precludes the possibility of refer-
ring it to either of the other evangelists.
Another thing which we notice is, that the several
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HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE N. TEST. 151
evangelists, in narrating the same circumstance or
reporting the same discourse, seldom or never employ
exactly the same words; but rather give the sense
in forms of expression slightly varied. To illus-
trate this fact by a single example, take the sentence
which was pronounced from heaven at the time of our
Saviour's baptism. Matthew (iii. 17) gives it, "TAw is
my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased ; " Mark
(i. 11) ^^Thou art my beloved son, in whom I am well
pleased ; " and Luke (iii. 22) " Thou art my beloved
son, in thee I am well pleased." A like variation is
often observable in the quotation of the same passage
of the Old Testament by the different writers of the
New. For example, compare Deut. viii. 3, and vi. 13,
as quoted by Matthew (iv. 4, 10) and by Luke (iv.
4, 8). In all these cases the sense is faithfully pre-
served, but the phraseology is varied. The writers
of the New Testament, indeed, never appear to aim
at exact quotations of language, and provided the
meaning is given, the mode of expression is regarded
as of comparatively little importance.
Two of the evangelists only, Matthew and Luke,
give an account of the birth and childhood of Christ ;
but all the four are very particular in their detaOs
respecting his death and resurrection ; for these were
the great events on which the most important conse-
quences depended.
The most important fact, however, to be borne in
mind in reading the Gospels, is, that they are neither
histories nor full biographies, but simply scattered
notices of transactions and discourses intended to illus-
trate particular points in the character of Christ, and
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152 THE B00K8 OF THE BIBLE.
SO arranged as to secure this purpose, but with little
regard to the order of time. The evangelists disclaim;
all intention of writing complete and consecutive nar-.
ratives, and declare that their whole design is, by-
relating a few facts, to give such an impression respect-
ing the character, teachings and works of Christ, a»
might induce men to receive him as the pronused Mes-
siah, the Saviour of the world (John xx. 30, 31 ; xxi,
25). The evangelist here says, expressly, that he had.
taken but few facts from the whole number which had
fallen under his notice, and that these had been selected
with exclusive reference to the object above stated. .
We are not to look, therefore, for complete biography
or chronological arrangement in the Gospels, but only
for detached examples of the teachings and doings of
Christ, suited to illustrate his character.
The character of the Gospels in this respect can be
easily illustrated by analogous examples from classic*al
literature. After the death of Socrates, his discipleg,
Plato and Xenophon, undertook by their literary efforts
to vindicate the charactCT of their master from the
.aspersions cast upon it by his enemies. The work of
Xenophon is divided into four books and subdivided
into distinct topics. Tlie topics of the first book are
the following :
L Socrates did not contemn the gods of his countiy,
nor introduce new objects of worship.
II. Socrates was not a corrupter of young men.
III. What sort of mqn Socrates was, both in word^
and deeds, during his whole life.
IV. How Socrates demon^ated the existence of
God.
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HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE N. TEST. l53
V. How Socrates discoursed on temperance.
VL Disputation of Socrates with Antiphon the
VIL How Socrates dissuaded men from arrogance.
Each of these topics is illustrated by anecdotes
respecting Socrates, and by reports of conversations
which he had with different persons, bearing on the
several points ; and these are thrown together in the
manner best suited to illustrate the different topics,
without regard to the order of time in which the trans-
actions or conversations actually took place, and with-
out any endeavor to preserve the appearance of con-
tinuity of narrative. Accordingly, this work is never
regarded as a biography of Socrates, and is always
referred to under the appellation of memoirs or memo-
rabilia. Its Greek title aifofiviifiovavftara (apomnemoneiL-
mata) is applied by Justin Martyr to the Gospels, and
with great propriety, for they are works of precisely
the same kind.
An examination of the Gospel of Matthew will show
that it is constructed on a plan very similar to that of
Xenophon's Memorabilia of Socrates. After a brief
notice of the birth and childhood of Jesus (i. ii.) and
his entrance on his public ministry (iii. iv.), Matthew
proceeds to show what Christ was as a public teacher
of religion, and gives an adequate example of the
nature of his instructions and his mode of communi-
cating them, by reporting at considerable length the
substance of his sermon on the mount (v.-vii.), I
say the substance of the sermon, for it is evident that
Matthew does not give the whole discourse word for
word as it was uttered, from the fact that Luke, who
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154 THE BOOKS OF TUE BIBLE.
in a briefer abstract of the same sermon (vi. 20-49),
has yet inserted some things omitted by Matthew, as
for example the three woes corresponding to the bea-
titudes (Luke vi. 25).
Matthew next exhibits Christ as a worker of mira-
cles, and collects into one connected view several mira-
cles of different kinds, wrought in various places and
at different times, for the purpose of showing what
Christ was in reference to the exercise of miraculous
powers (viii. ix.).
He afterwards exhibits Christ in another view, as a
teacher by parables, and collects together several dif-
ferent parables as a specimen of this most interesting
mode of teaching (xiii.).
Thus throughout his Gospel, Matthew does not fol-
low any chronological series of events or instructions,
but groups together things of the same kind, and shows
by a series of living pictures, what Christ was in all
the various circumstances through which he passed.
This mode of writing was chosen by him for the same
reason that it had been before by Xenophon, because
it was the best adapted to the particular purpose he
had in view, which was to vindicate the character of
Christ before his countrymen, and set it in its true
light.
Christ had been the great moral teacher and bene-
factor of his nation. He had been undervalued, slan-
dered, and persecuted all his life, and was at last un-
justly doomed to a cruel death, attended with all the
circumstances of indignity and shame, which could be
brought together to blast his reputation and throw a
shade over the splendor of his exalted virtues. Mat-
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HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE N. TEST. 155
thew, his disciple, like Xenophon, the disciple of Soc-
rates, knew and could appreciate his master's worth ;
and by a simple detail of what he did and said in vari-
ous circumstances and on diflferent topics, sought to
disarm the prejudices of his countrymen, and bring
them to see what sort of a man he was, whom their
rulers with wicked hands had crucified and slain.
After these general remarks we shall now turn our
attention to the particular circumstances of each one
of the evangelists, the special object each had in view
while writing, the distinguishing peculiarities of each
one of the several Gospels, and especially the precise
grounds of evidence on which each of these books
stands before us in the Bible.
For a knowledge of these particulars we must rely
mainly on incidental and brief hints scattered through
the New Testament ; for the evangelists never make
themselves prominent in their narratives, nor give any
details respecting their personal history and circum-
stances. They preach not themselves^ hut Christ Jesus
the Lord,
The genuineness of the books of the New Testa-
ment is a question simply of historical fact, nothing
more nor less, and like every other question of fact, is
to be ascertained and determined by testimony, by the
testimony of independent and credible witnesses, and
this testimony not contradicted, but confirmed and
sustained by the internal evidence. We have already
shown in a preceding chapter, that the testimony of
the early Christians, to their own sacred books, is
at least as good and worthy of belief as any hu-
man testimony; and that if the facts in regard to
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156 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
their books can not be established by their testi-
mony, no facts of secular history can ever be estab-
lished by any human testimony whatever. Before
proceeding to the examination of each one of the his-
torical books of the New Testament, we wish to give
some general idea of the state of the testimony in
regard to them during the first four centuries. We
must remember that the great majority of the writers
of this early period have gone into oblivion, their
writings have perished, and the witnesses whom we
can call are but the few survivors of an immense ship-
wreck. We will cite the principal witnesses by name ;
and refer the reader to the preceding chapter for a
brief biography of the witnesses cited, which will show
their value as witnesses by a statement in regard to
their character and their qualifications to give testi-
mony on this particular point.
For the first three, or the synoptical Gospels in con^
nection, we call as witnesses, three of the personal
fi'iends and associates of the apostle Paul — to wit, Bar-
nabas, Clement of Rome (Phil. iv. 3), Hermas (Rom,
xvi. 14), and also Ignatius and Polycarp, the friends
and associates of the apostle John, five good witnesses.
For the four Gospels in connection, the witnesses
are Polycarp, Papias, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Tatian,
Theophilus, Clement of Alexandria, TertuUian, Origen,
Dionysius of Alexandria, Eusebius, Epiphanius, and
Jerome — thirteen witnesses, ten of them not cited
before.
To the Gospel of Matthew individually, Papias, Jus-
tin Martyr, Hegesippus, Irenaeus, Tatian, Athenagoras,
Theophilus, Pantaenus, Clement of Alexandria, Tei?-
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HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE N. TEST. 157
tuUian, Julius Africanua, Origen, Eusebius, Cyrill of
Jerusalem, Epiphanius, Jerome — seventeen witnesses,
five of them not cited before.
To the Gospel of Mark individually, Papias, Justin
Martyr, Irenaeus, Athenagoras, Clement of Alexandria,
Tertullian, Origen, Eusebius, Epiphanius, Jerome — ^ten
witnesses.
To the Gospel of Luke individually, Justin Martyr,
the Church of Vienne and Lyons in France, Irenaeus,
Tatian, Athenagoras, Theophilus, Clement of Alexan-
dria, Tertullian, Julius Africanus, Origen, Eusebius,
Epiphanius, Jerome — thirteen witnesses, one not cited
before.
To the Gospel of John individually, Barnabas, Her-
mas, Clement of Rome, Ignatius, Justin Martyr, Church
of Vienne and Lyons, Irenaeus, Polycrates, Tatian,
Athenagoras, Theophilus, Clement of Alexandria, Ter-
tullian, Origen, Dionysius of Alexandria, Eusebius,
Dorotheus, Victorinus, Epiphanius, Jerome — twenty
witnesses, four not previously cited.
Witnesses to the book of Acts, Barnabas, Clement
of Rome, Ignatius, Polycarp, Papias, Dionysius of
Corinth, Justin Martyr, Church of Vienne and Lyons,
Irenaeus, Tatian, Athenagoras, Clement of Alexandria,
Tertullian, Origen, Eusebius, Jerome — fifteen witnesses,
and one which has not been cited before.
Beside these witnesses, who all belonged to the
Christian church, we have some valuable testimony
which is anonymous, as that of the Epistle to Diogne-
tus ; and also other very important testimony, all cor-
roborating the witnesses belonging to the church, from
heretics and pagans and Jews.
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158 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Before proceeding any further, let the reader now
turn to the biographical chapter (chapter fourth) and
judge for himself whether any ancient books whatever
have anything like the amount of unexceptionable tes-
timony in their favor which we here adduce in favor
of the historical books of the New Testament ; and the
other books will be found equally well sustained when
we come to discuss them.
It is sometimes objected that these witnesses simply
copy from one another, and that accordingly the testi-
mony of ten or a dozen is no more than the testimony
of one or two. To this we answer, first, that the state-
ment is a mere assumption of the objector without any
positive evidence in its favor whatever. The objec-
tion, as used in this discussion, is wholly the offspring
of the imagination and has no historical basis to rest
upon. Moreover, the objection is in itself altogether
improbable. But very few out of hundreds and thou-
sands of witnesses have come down to our time. The
others have been buried under the ruins of past ages.
To assume, then, that the witnesses which still survive
of the second and third, and subsequetit ages of the
church, were taught exclusively by those few who still
survive to our time of the first age of the church, and
not by any of those who have now passed into ob-
livion, is to assume that which is on the very face of
it an entire absurdity. The witnesses which we cite
from each of the primitive ages of the church had the
use of all the witnesses who had preceded them, and
who are now unknown.
That we do not overstate the number of witnesses
is evident from the pagan writers themselves. Tacitus
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HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE N. TEST. 159
(AnnaL xv. 44) says that the Christians in Rome, dur-
ing the reign of Nero, and the life time of the apos-
tles, A. D. 64, were already a " vast multitude " ; Pliny,
of the next generation, A. D. 112, in his letter to Tra-
jan, gives a similar account of their great numbers in
the remote province of Bithynia ; while the Christian
writers Irenaeus (Adv. Haer. i. 10) and Tertullian
(Adv. Jud. c. 7) from A. D. 150 to 180 represent
their believing brethren as thickly scattered over the
whole known world, both civilized and barbarian.
At the very time of the composition of the Christian
Scriptures, or within one generation thereafter, there
were Christian churches in every part of the world ;
and every church had its elders, (Titus i. 5) educated
for their work, and fully competent to form a correct
judgment in regard to their sacred books.
The witnesses of each of the primitive ages took
the best matured results of their own time, and their
matured results were drawn from hundreds of original
and credible witnesses then well known, but since lost,
as weU as from the very few who yet survive. None
of them depended exclusively on the dozen or twenty
which we have, and who have outlived the ruins of
the past.
All human testimony, even the best, is liable to
error, and some witnesses are much more worthy of
credit than others. We do not require that the testi-
mony of every or any witness be received as infallible,
nor that there should be no discrimination among the
witnesses. We ask only that this testimony be treated
just like all other human testimony ; and be received
as substantially correct, unless there be suflScient cir
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160 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
cumstantial or other evidence to contradict it, or unless
the character of the witness himself be proved to be
justly liable to suspicion. Let it be fully understood
that we do not profess in any case to cite all the wit-
nesses who are still extant; but only those whose tes-
timony is the most full and the most easily accessible.
With these preliminary remarks on the nature and ex-
tent of the evidence given, we proceed to the discus-
sion of each one of the individual books of the New
Testament, beginning, as a matter of course, with the
historical books in their usual order.
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CHAPTER SIXTH.
THE FOUR GOSPELS SEPARATELY EXAJONED.
MATTHEW.
Matthew was a , Galilean Jew, and held the office
of a receiver of customs under the Roman govern-
ment, at the sea of Tiberias, near Capernaum (Matt,
ix. 9). By Mark he is called Levi, son of Alpheus
(Mark ii. 14). When a Jew became a Roman citizen
he generally assumed a Roman name ; and it is proba-
ble that Levi was the original Hebrew, and Matthew
the assumed Roman name of this evangelist He left
his business at the call of Christ, and became his per-
manent attendant and one of the twelve apostles a
short time before the delivery of the sermon on the
mount (Luke v. 27). In enumerating the apostles he
calls himself Matthew the publican (Matt. x. 9) or
customhouse officer, a name exceedingly odious to the
oppressed Jews.
The nature of the publican's office, and the injus-
tice and oppression which these officers generally prac-
tised, were enough to excite odium in a nation less sen-
sitive than the Jewish. When the Romans subjugated
the Jews, they treated them as they did other con-
quered nations, that is, they required of every man,
in addition to various taxes, the payment of an annual
tribute, as a token of his subjection and for the support
11
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162 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
of the dignity of the Uoman empire. This tribute
was extremely hateful to the Jews, who boasted that
they had no sovereign but God, that they were Abra-
ham's seed, and were not in bondage to any man.
But oppressive as this tax was in itself, it often became
still more so by the manner in which it was collected.
It was customary for the government to expose
the taxes of a province to sale, and he who would
oflfer the most for them had the privilege of col-
lecting ; and all that he could obtain above the amount
paid to the government, went to enrich himself.
Those who had thus taken the taxes of a whole pro-
vince, would divide the province into districts, and
expose them to sale in the same manner ; and often
the district would be subdivided and sold again ; so
that sometimes three or four diflFerent sets of extor-
tioners were to be enriched out of the surplus tribute
money of the people, above that which went into the
public treasury. As the right of collecting was jfre-
quently sold from one to another at an increasing price,
it was for the interest of the publican to extort as
much as possible ; and a& the general government par-
ticipated with the j)ublicans in their plunder, it was
for their interest to listen to no complaint against the
collectors of their revenue. There was scarcely a pos-
sibility of redress in case of wrong ; and if one refused
to submit to injustice, frequently by false accusation he
was robbed of his whole property (compare Luke iii.
12-14; xix. 1-10). It is no wonder then, that the
very name of publican became odious, and synony-
mous with that of sinner ; though doubtless there were
some who performed the duties of this office in an
honorable and conscientious manner. .
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 163
It is the unanimous testimony of the ancients, that
Matthew wrote his Gospel for the use of the Jewish
Christians of Palestine ; and this testimony is confirmed
by internal evidence. The writer everywhere takes
it for granted, that his readers are well acquainted
with the geography of Palestine ; and he does not
consider it necessary to explain any of the Jewish
customs to which he alludes. The considerations,
which he adduces to prove the Messiahship of Jesus,
are such aj» would have most weight with Jews. He
traces the genealogy of Christ from his reputed father
through David to Abraham ; and takes particular pains
to show how the prophecies of the Old Testament were
fulfilled in Jesus of Nazareth. Compare L 23 ; ii. 6,
15, 18; iiL 3; iv. 14; viii. 17; xiL 17; xiii. 35; xxi.
4 ; xxvi 56 ; xxvii. 9. Indeed it is the leading object
of his Gospel to prove that Jesus is the Messiah spoken
of by the prophets, an argument which at that time
Jews only could appreciate.
The testimony is just as unanimous and unequivocal
that Matthew originally wrote his Gospel in Hebrew
as it is that he wrote a Gospel at all. This will be
seen in the citations of witnesses which we shall soon
give. And if he wrote for the use of the Hebrews in
Palestine previous to the destruction of Jerusalem, as
all agree, there was an absolute necessity that he
should write in Hebrew. By Hebrew is here meant the
Syro-Chaldaic or Aramaen dialect spoken at that time
by the Jews in their own land. This in the New Tes-
tament is called Hebrew (Acts xxl 40 ; xxii. 2), and
though not the pure ancient Hebrew, it is as much like
it as the English of the present day is like the Englis!^
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164 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
of the Reformation period. It is the language in
which Christ usually conversed while on earth, as is
seen from such passages as Mark v. 41 ; viL 34 ; xv.
24 ; Matt, xxvii 46. The Jews tenaciously held on
to this their national tongue, using Greek only from
absolute necessity ; and Paul greatly conciliated a Je-
rusalem mob simply by addressing them in their native
Hebrew (Acts xxi. 40 ; xxii. 2). When Paul on this
occasion asked permission of the chief captain to ad-
dress the multitude, that officer expressed his surprise
that he found the apostle so well acquainted with the
Greek language (Acts xxi. 37, 38). Josephus was a
Jew of high rank, bom about the time when Matthew
first wrote his Gospel, and received the best education
which Palestine could then give to her most favored
sons, and he gives the following most explicit testimo-
ny on this point. Antiq. XX. xi. 2. " I have taken
great pains to acquire the Greek learning, and to un-
derstand the elements of the Greek language, though
I have so long accustomed myself to speak our own
tongue, that I can not pronounce Greek with sufficient
exactness; for our nation does not encourage those
that learn the languages of many nations.'' Again in
his preface to the same work, sec. 2, he says " it is a
difficult thing to translate our history (the Jewish)
into a foreign and to* us unaccustomed language " (the
Greek).
This being the case, (and who can contradict the
testimony of Josephus on such a point ?) if Matthew
cherished any expectation of being read by his own
countrymen, he must have addressed them in their own
language.
How happens it then that there has been preserved
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THE POUR GOSPELS. 165
in the church a Greek Gospel of Matthew and no He-
brew one ? The ancients assign two dates to the com-
position of Matthew's Gospel, one from A. D. 40
to 46, the other from the year 60 to 65. The infer-
ence is quite obvious that he wrote his Gospel twice,
and the reason for this is very plain. After the over-
throw of Jerusalem the Jews were dispersed and
ceased to speak their own language, and the Greek
became their usual tongue, as Hebrew had been before.
Matthew, then, foreseeing this exigency, as the time
drew near, prepared for them his Greek Gospel, and
there being no further use for the Hebrew one it grad-
ually disappeared ; though Jerome aflSrms that he had
not only seen it, in the famous library of Pamphilus at
Caesarea, but actually himself translated it into Greek
and Latin.
Among the manuscripts brought to the British Mu-
seum in 1842, there is a very ancient Syrian Matthew,
which Dr. Cureton has published, and which he sup-
poses, not without some reason, to be the original
Hebrew Matthew. It diflFers from, our Greek Matthew
only in phraseology here and there. The following is
a specimen of the variations ;
Oreek. Syrian.
i. 20, He shall save his peo- He shall save the world
pie from their sins. from its sins.
L 23, God with us. Our God with us.
L 25, knew her not dwelt with her in purity
vii 5, hypocrite. accepter of persons.
XV. 22, grievously demon- badly conducted by a
ized. devil's hand.
xvL 19, the keys of the the keys of the gates of
kingdom. the kingdom.
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/,
166 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Our present Greek is no translation, but an original
from Matthew's own hand ; and we have the evidence
entirely satisfactory of a Hebrew Gospel of his, writ-
ten some twenty years earlier, and indispensible to Mat-
thew's purpose of introducing the life of Christ to his
own countrymen. The Hebrew Gospel, as we are in-
formed by Eusebius (E. H. v. 10), was found among
the Christians in India in the latter part of the second
century, by Pantaenus, the missionary and philosopher,
who afterwards with so much celebrity presided over
the catechetic school at Alexandria. He testifies that
the book was carried thither by the apostle Bartholo-
mew, who first preached the Gospel in those regions.
According to the testimony of antiquity, which there
is no ground for contradicting, the Hebrew Matthew
was the first of the four Gospels that was written.
Eusebius says that after our Lord's ascension Matthew
preached in Judea, (for fifteen years, adds Clement of
Alexandria,) and then went to foreign nations. He
is said to have visited Ethiopia, Persia and Parthia,
and to have died a martjrr's death.
Matthew may be styled a plain, matter of fiict writer ;
and the habits of his mind are evidently those of a
man of business rather than study. He exhibits Christ
mostly in his earthly character and relations ; ss a law-
giver, promulgating the new dispensation from the
mount, as Moses did the old from Sinai ; as a worker
of miracles and a teacher. Because he thus treated
of Christ in his earthly employments and human char-
acter, his G<)spel was by the ancients called ou^aitmr
(aomatikon) or the bodily Gospel.
He is very brief in narrative, disregarding almost
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 1G7
entirely the order of time, but particular in his reports
of the discourses and parables of our Lord, and gen-
erally he gives only just enough of the narrative to
introduce the discourse. In this respect, as well as in
some others, his Gospel bears a striking resemblance to
the work of Xenophen alluded to above.
Indeed, there is the same sort of difference between
the accounts of Jesus Christ as given by Matthew and
John, that we find between the accounts of Socrates
as given by Xenophon and Plato.
TESTIMONIES TO MATTHEW.
In all cases, in examining the testimonies cited, the
reader is requested to turn to the name of each wit-
ness, in chap, fourth, and ascertain his qualifications to
give testimony, as there stated. It is also to be noted
that much of this testimony is given incidentally, and is
all the more valuable on that account ; that is, it is not
expressly stated always that such an author wrote such
a book, but there is a quotation firom the book, or an
allusion to some statement in it, which shows that the
witness read the same bpok in the same way that we
now read it, and assigned it to the same author. It is
further to be observed that the ancients quote the New
Testament very much as the New Testament writers
quote the Old Testament, seldom with literal exactness,
quite freely, often giving the sense only without regard
to the exact words, as though they quoted from mem-
ory simply, as doubtless they often did.
The most important witnesses for Matthew are Pa-
pias, Ignatius, Justin. Martyr, Hegesippus, Letter to
Diognetus, Irenaeus, Tatian, Pantaenus, Clement of
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168 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Alexandria, Tertullian, Origen, Eusebius, Cyrill of Je-
rusalem, Epiphanius, Jerome, Julius Africanus.
As introductory to the quotations which will be
made from the ancient witnesses in behalf of the Gos-
pels, we commend to the reader's attention the follow-
ing paragraphs from Dean Stanley :
" Irenaeus and Tertullian were two writers in the last
quarter of the second century ; the former had spent
his youth among the churches of Asia Minor, and had
migrated among the Christians of Gaul ; the latter was
a presbyter in the Latin church of North Africa. Both
were strong traditionists ; and both distinctly appeal
to the four canonical Gospels by name. But would
churches so widely remote as those of Smyrna, Car-
thage, and Lyons, with one accord receive as Scripture
four books which were only a few years old ? And
besides, Irenaeus had been in his youth a companion
of Polycarp, the disciple of St, John. Is it credible
that St. John's Gospel could have been received by
him if it had been never heard of till A. D. 150?
Moreover, about A. D. 150, Celsus quotes both the
synoptical Gospels and St. John, and says, ' all this I
have taken out of your own Scriptures.' About the
same date, Theophilus and Tatian both constructed a
Harmony of the Four Gospels ; and ten years earlier
still, Justin Martyr speaks of Gospels written by the
apostles and their companions; meaning, there can
surely be little question, the four as we now have them.
Twenty years before that, Polycarp uses St. Matthew,
and quotes the first Epistle of St John, which is allowed
on all hands to be (under any supposition) by the same
author as the Gospel. And about the same period,
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 1G9
Papias, a bishop in Asia Minor, who tells us he took
particular pains to collect oral information from survi-
vors who had known the apostles, describes how Mat-
thew wrote originally in Hebrew, and how Mark drew
his materials from St. Peter. The passage is but a
fi'agment preserved in Eusebius, so that no sound argu-
ment against St. John can be drawn e silentio^ any-
more than against St. Paul or St. Luke. Thus we are
brought down to about A. D. 100, without a trace of
any conciliar action, or of any controversy on the sub-
ject which can not easily be explained. The church
emerges from the first century with the sacred book
of the four Gospels in her hand. The very earliest
apocryphal Gospels only attempt to fill up the blanks
in their narrative, and never give a competing account
The most ancient of all was held by Jerome, who
translated it, to be the Hebrew original of St. Mat-
thew. The Montanists, in their wildest hatred of St.
John's Gospel, could only attribute it to his contempo-
rary Cerinthus. And every recent discovery, such as
the missing end of the Clementine Homilies (contain-
ing a quotation from St. John), and the original Greek
of Barnabas (giving St Matthew's Gospel the honora-
ble title of ' Scripture '), only tends to corroborate the
proof, that we have in the four Gospels the primitive
records of Christianity, and a trustworthy means for
understanding what the mind and the preaching of the
apostles really were."*
We subjoin a specimen of the kind of testimony
which the ancient witnesses give in respect to Matthew :
*This argament is well drawn out in Tischendorfs pamphlet^
^ Wann wurden unsere Evangelien verfasst?"
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170 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Paptas : " Matthew set forth his oracles in the He-
brew dialect, which every one interpreted as he was
able." Euseb. Hist. Ecc. iii. 39.
Irenaeua : " Matthew put forth the writing of the
Gospel among the Hebrews in their dialect." Adv.
Haer, iii. ; Euseb. Hist. Ecc. v. 8.
Jenrnie: "Matthew, first in Judea, on account of
those from the circumcision who believed, composed
the Gospel of Christ in Hebrew letters and words."
Catal. c. 4. "Matthew published a Gospel in Judea
in the Hebrew language." Proleg. in Matth.
Eusehivs: "Matthew, having first proclaimed his
Gospel to the Hebrews .... committed it to writing
in his native tongue." Ecc. Hist. iii. 23.
Epiphanius : " They indeed (the Ebionites) receive
the Gospel according to Matthew ; for this both they
use and also the Cerinthians. They call it indeed the
Gospel according to the Hebrews j as it is true to say,
that Matthew alone in the New Testament made the
declaration and preaching of the Gospel in Hebrew
and with Hebrew letters." Haeres. xxx. 3.
Cflement of Alexandria : " Matthew having first pro-
claimed the Gospel in Hebrew, when on the point of
going also to other nations, committed it to writing in
his native tongue." Euseb. E. H. iii. 24
Origen : " The first (Gospel) is written according to
Matthew, the same that was once a publican but after-
wards an apostle of Christ, who having published it
for the Jewish converts, wrote it in the Hebrew."
Euseb. E. H. vi. 25.
Ignatius: "How then was he manifested to the
ages? A star shone in heaven, in splendor excelling
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 171
aU the other stars, and its brightness was ineffable, and
the strangeness of it inspired terror." Matth. ii ;
Ephe& xix.
Barnabas abeady in his time quotes Matthew as
Scripture, Epist chap. iv. " As it is written many are
called but few chosen." Matth. xx. 16; X3{ii. 14.
Again, chap. v. ** He did not come to call the right-
eous but sinners to repentance." Matth. ix. 13.
Justin Mariyr: "The discourses of Christ were
brief and compendious, for he was no sophist, but his
word was the power of God. Concerning chastity he
said this: Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust
after her hath committed adultery with her already in
his heart before God. Also, If thy right eye offend
thee, cut it out, for it is profitable for thee with one
eye to enter into the kingdom of God, rather than
with two eyes to be sent into eternal fire. Also, He
who marries a woman repudiated by another man com-
mits adultery. Also, There are some who are made
eunuchs by man, and there are some who are born
eunuchs, and some who make themselves eunuchs for
the kingdom of heavens's sake ; but not all receive
this." See Matth. v. 28, 29, 32 ; xviii. 9 ; xix. 11, 12.
Apol. i. p. 21.
" Christ called not the just and the chaste to repent-
ance, but the impious, the incontinent and the unjust,
for thus he said, I came not to call the righteous, but
sinners to repentance." Matth. ix. 13. Apol. i. p. 22.
" He cured all sickness and all disease." Matth. iv.
23. Apol. i p. 50.
" At that time some coming to him asked him if it
were proper to pay tribute to Caesar, and he answered.
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Tell me, whose image hath the coin ? and they say
Caesar's ; and again he answered them, render there-
fore to Caesar the things that be Caesar's, and to God the
things that are God's." Matth. xxii 15-21. Apol. i.
p. 26.
*'He (John) seated by the river Jordan cried, I indeed
baptize you with water unto repentance, but there will
come one mightier than I, whose shoes I am not wor-
thy to bear, he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost
and with fire, whose fan is in his hand, and he will
thoroughly purge his floor, and his wheat he will
gather into his gamer, but he will bum up the chaff
with unquenchable fire." Matth. iii. 11, 12. Dialogue
with Trypho p. 268-9.
In the few works of Justin which remain to us there
are from 50 to 75 quotations of this kind from the
Gospel of Matthew.
Epistle to Diognetvs : " Christ taught that we should
not be anxious (take no thought) about food and rai-
ment." Matth. vi. 25.
Taiian : " The Saviour said it is not proper to lay
up treasure on earth where moth and rust corrupteth."
Matth. vi. 19. Clem. Alex. Strom, iii. p. 463.
Athenagoras : " I say to you love your enemies, bless
them that curse ypu, pray for them that persecute you,
that you may be the children of your Father who is
in heaven, who causeth his sun to rise on the evil and
on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the
unjust" Matth. v. 44, 45. Legat p. 11.
Theophilus : " Thus he teaches those that do good
not to boast, that they be not pleasers of men. Let
not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth."
Matth. vi. 4 Autol. p. 126.
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 173
Pantaenvs : " To whom (the inhabitants of India)
Bartholomew, one of the twelve apostles, preached,
and left them the writings of Matthew in Hebrew let-
ters, which is preserved to this day." Easeb. R H.
V. 10.
Clement of Alexandria : " But in the Gospel accord-
ing to Matthew the genealogy which begins with Abra-
ham terminates with Mary the mother of the Lord,
For there are, he says, from Abraham to David, four-
teen generations, and from David to the carrying away
into Babylon, fourteen generations, and from the car-
rying away into Babylon until Christ, there are like-
wise fourteen other generations." Matth. i. 17 Strom.
i p. 341.
Tertullian: "In the outset Matthew himself, that
most faithful reporter of the Gospel, as companion of
the Lord, for no other reason than that he might make
us acquainted with the carnal origin of Christ, thus
begins. The book of the generation of Jesus Christ,
the son of David, the son of Abraham. De Came
Christi, c. 22.
"Matthew, bringing the origin of the Lord from
Abraham to Mary, says, Jacob begat Joseph the hus-
band of Mary, from whom Christ was bom." id. c. 20.
The genuineness of the first two chapters of Mat-
thew has by some been called in question, but un-
doubtedly on doctrinal grounds, solely for the sake of
getting rid of the narrative of the miraculous birth of
Christ, and not for any historical reason whatever.
The earliest testimony, as given above, is just as clear
and positive to these two chapters as to any other part
of the book, and the most critical examination of the
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174 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
language and style has failed to produce any result
unfavorable to the authorship of Matthew. See above,
Ignatius, Irenaeus, TertuUian, Clement of Alexandria,
Epiphanius, Julius Africanus, and others.
Irenaeus : ". But again Matthew speaking concerning
the angel, says. The angel of the Lord appeared
to Joseph in a dream. Of what Lord he himself inter-
prets : That it might be fulfilled which was spoken of
the Lord by the prophet, Out of Egypt have I called
my son. Therefore a virgin shall conceive in the
womb and shall bring forth a son, and shall call his
name Jesus, which is interpreted, God with us." Adv.
Haer. iii. 9.
Cyril of Jerusalem : " Matthew writing a Gospel
wrote it in the Hebrew tongue." Catech. xiv.
Epiphanius : " Wherefore indeed this Matthew also
writes the Gospel in Hebrew letters and preaches, and
begins not at the beginning, but derives the genealogy
indeed from Abraham." Matth. L 1, 2. Haeres. li.
Jerome: "Concerning the New Testament I now
speak, that doubtless it is Greek, the apostle Matthew
being excepted, who first in Judea gave out the Gos-
per of Christ in Hebrew letters." Praefat in iv. Evang.
ad Dam.
Julius Africanus. This writer gives an elaborate
statement of the diflFerent genealogies of Christ as they
stand in Matthew and Luke, and proposes an ingenious
method of reconciling them. It is perfectly certain
that he used the same first chapter of Matthew which
is found in our own Greek Testaments.
Here are a very few of the testimonies which we
have in the earliest ages to the existence of Matthew's
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 175
Gospel, and as we now have it. We give less than a
tithe of what might be adduced even from the scanty
remains, which have escaped the ravages of time, of
the primitive Christian literature. But the evidence,
even from this source, that there was from the first a
Gk)spel of Matthew, and that this Gospel, whether He-
brew or Greek, in fact both, was the same Gospel
which we now have under Matthew's name, is beyond
controversy.
GOSPEL OF MiUK.
Mark was the son of a pious woman in Jerusalem,
and the intimate friend of the apostie Peter (Acts xii.
12 ; 1 Pet V. 13). He was also the friend and com-
panion of Paul (Acts xii 25 ; xiii. 5), till some neg-
lect of his, which occasioned a misunderstanding be-
tween Paul and Barnabas respecting him, produced a
separation (Acts. xv. 36-41). Paul afterwards became
reconciled to him, perhaps when he met him at Rome
in company with Peter, and speaks of him in several
of his episties with great confidence and affection
(Col. iv. 10; 2 Tim. iv. 11; Philemon 24).
According to the almost unanimous testimony of
antiquity, his Gospel was written at Rome, under the
superintendence of the apostle Peter, a little after that
of Matthew, and it was intended for the instruction of
the Roman converts from paganism. To this, internal
evidence corresponds.
He has many pure Latin words written in Greek let-
ters, where the other evangelists use the appropriate
Greek words.
For example *BPTVQfw (kenturwn) the Latin centurto
instead of the Greek iKonrtaqpif (hekatantarchea) cen-
turton^ XV. 39, 46, 35. Compare also xii. 42.
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176 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
Again, anexovi&Twq the Latin speculator^ executioner^
vl27.
The Latin phrases 9(rx^wg i/U (eachatos echei) and
TO (Karbp nmriaw tO ikanOU p0te8a% V. 23 ; XV. 16.
The above purely Latin words and phrases, instead
of the corresponding Greek, are used by Mark and
Mark only of all the writers of the New Testament
But why if he wrote for the Romans, did he not
write in Latin instead of Greek ?
It is evident from the statements of Tacitus, Martial,
Juvenal, and the very inscriptions on the Roman tomb-
stones, that Greek was generally understood and used
at Rome during this period, and probably the children
universally, when taught to read at all, were taught
to read Greek. The emperors themselves, as Marcus
Antoninus, when they became authors, wrote in Greek,
Classic authors residing at Rome, and writing to Ro-
mans, as Epictetus, Plutarch, Polybius, Josephus, wrote
in Greek. Justin Martyr, residing at Rome and ad-
dressing his two apologies to the Roman emperors,
wrote them both in Greek. So of the Christian wri-
ters generally. Irenaeus, Clement of Rome, Hennas,
and others, living in the Latin empire and writing for
Latins as well as Greeks, used the Greek tongue as
the dialect most generally accessible as the language
of books. It is no wonder, then, that Mark, residing
at Rome and writing for Romans, should write in
Greek, nor that his composition should be characterized
by Latin words and idioms.
He carefully explains allusions to Jewish customs, as
if writing for those who were unacquainted with them
(Mark vii. 2-4 ; xv. 6). He is much more brief than
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 177
the other evangelists, and has but twenty-four verses
the substance of which is not found in Matthew and
Luke. Unlike Matthew he is very particular in narra-
tive, and very much condenses the conversations and
discourses of Jesus.
There is no proof that he had ever seen the Gospel
of Matthew before writing his own ; much less that
his own is an abridgment of Matthew's, as some have
1 supposed. The contrary is shown from the fact, that
he is in not a few instances much more particular in
his narrative than Matthew. (Compare Mark v. 1 with
Matt. viii. 28 ; Mark ix 14 with Matt. xvii. 12-14 ; and
Mark xiv. 66, 67 with Matt. xxvi. 69).
It is the uncontradicted testimony of antiquity, which
there is no reason to doubt, that Mark spent the latter
part of his life at Alexandria in Egypt, as pastor of
the churches there ; and it is evident from 1 Peter v.
13, that he had been with the apostle Peter in Baby-
lon. Eusebius, E. H. ii. 15.
The witnesses for Mark especially, are Papias, Justin
Martyr, Irenaeus, Athenagoras, Clement of Alexandria,
Tertullian, Origen, Eusebius, Epiphanius, Jerome.
A specimen of their testimony we subjoin.
TESTIMONIES TO MARK.
Papias : " And John the Presbyter said this : Mark
being the interpreter of Peter, whatsoever he recorded
he wrote with great accuracy, but not however in the
order in which it was done or spoken by our Lord, for
he neither heard nor followed our Lord, but as before
said, he was in company with Peter, who gave him
such information as was necessary ...... wherefore
Mark has not erred in anything ..... but was care-
12
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178 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
fully attentive to one thing, not to pass by anything'
that he heard, or to state anything falsely in these ac-
counts." Euseb. E. EL iii. 39.
Irenaeus not only directly quotes the Gospel of
Mark ; but the last verses of this Gospel, which have
been rejected by many writers, he especially ascribes
to the evangelist Mark. Adv. Haer. iii. 10, 6. " Mark
says in the end of his Gospel (Mark xvi. 19), And in-
deed the Lord Jesus, after he had spoken to them, waa
received up into heaven, and sat on the right hand of
God."
Again, " Mark, the disciple and interpreter of Peter,
transmitted to us in writing what had been preached
by him." Euseb. E. H. v. 8.
Origen: "The second (Gospel) is according to
Mark, who composed it as Peter explained it to him,
whom he also acknowledges as his son in his general
epistle." etc. (1 Pet. v. 13.) Euseb. E. H. vi. 25.
JuBtin Martyr : " In what suffering and torture the
wicked will be, hear the words spoken in like manner
on this point, for they are these (Mark ix. 44, 46, 48),
their worm shall not cease and their fire shall not be
quenched. Apol. ii. p. 87.
" And as also it is requisite to worship God only, he
thus declared, saying (Mark xii. 30), the greatest
commandment of the law is, thou shalt worship the
Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve, with all
thy heart and with all thy might, the Lord who cre-
ated thee." Apol. ii. p. 63.
It is to be remembered, both here and elsewhere,
that Justin does not quote book, chapter and verse,
but only the sense of each passage, and for the con-
venience of the reader, I insert in parenthesis the
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THE POUR GOSPELS. 179
reference to the text quoted. This is to be noticed in
every instance of quotations from the fathers, for they
indeed, as has already been shown, had no chapters
and verses to refer to.
Athenagoras : Mark x. 11, " For whosoever shall put
away his wife, and marrieth another, committeth adul-
tery."
Tertullian : " The Gospel which Mark published, is
aflSrmed as Peter's, whose interpreter Mark was."
Adv. Marcion iv. 5.
EpipTianius: "And immediately after Matthew,
Mark, the companion of St Peter at Rome, is directed
to put forth a Gospel ; which having written, he is
sent by St. Peter into the country of the Egyptians."
Haerea 51.
Jerome : " Mark, the disciple and interpreter of Pe-
ter, being asked by the brethren at Rome, wrote a Gos-
pel in brief, according to what he had heard Peter rela-
ting ; and when Peter had heard it, he approved of
it, and gave it forth to be read in the churches by his
authority, as Clement also writes in the sixth book of
the Hypotuposeis." Catal. Script, c. 8.
Hippolytua: "Jesus says to all at the same time,
concerning the gifts which shall be given by him
through the Holy Spirit (Mark xvi. 27), And these
signs shall follow them that believe, in my name they
shall cast out devils, they shall speak with new tongues,
they shall take up serpents, and if they drink any
deadly thing it shall not hurt them, and they shall lay
hands on the sick, and they shall recover." Concern-
ing Spiritual Gifts, 0pp. p. 545.
As observed before, and the reader must remember,
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the author quoted, Hippolytus, does not give the name
of the book, nor the chapter and verse.
Cflement of Alexandria : " So greatly did the splen-
dor of piety enlighten the minds of Peter's hearers,
(at Rome) that it was not sufficient to hear but once,
nor to receive the unwritten doctrine of the Gospel of
God ; but they persevered with various entreaties to
solicit Mark, as the companion of Peter, and whose
Gospel we have, that he should leave them a monu-
ment of the doctrine thus orally communicated, in
writing. Nor did they cease their solicitations until
they had prevailed with the man, and thus became the
means of that writing which is called the Gospel
according to Mark. They say also that the apostle
Peter having ascertained what was done by the reve-
lation of the Spirit, was delighted with the zealous
ardor expressed by these men, and that the history
obtained his authority for the purpose of being read
in the churches." Euseb. E. H. ii. 15.
" When Peter had proclaimed the word publicly at
Rome, and declared the Gospel under the influence
of the Spirit ; as there was a great number present,
they requested Mark, who had followed hini from afar,
and remembered well what he had said, to reduce the
things to writing, and that after composing his Gospel,
he gave it to them who had requested it of him."
Euseb. E. H. vi 14
GOSPEL OP LUKE.
Luke was a gentile by birth, and a physician (Col.
iv. 11, 14), and according to the prevailing testimony
of the ancients, a citizen of Antioch, where the foUow-
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 181
ers of Christ were first called Christians. He waa
familiar with Greek literature, as is evident from the
style and structure of his two works, the Gospel and
book of Acts, and his method of addressing them to
Theophilus. The introductory verses of his Gospel
are pure and even elegant Greek, and the same may
be said of his introduction to the Acts; and indeed
wherever he writes independently in his own person,
and does not quote from or relate the discourses of
others.
He became a zealous Christian and made himself
familiarly acquainted by personal investigation (Luke
L 1-4) with all the circumstances attending the origin of
Christianity, diligently studied the Hebrew Scriptures,
and was the constant companion of the apostle Paul.
Of Theophilus, the friend to whom he ascribes his
two works, nothing is known with certainty. He was
probably a Greek who lived out of Palestine, and per-
haps at Antioch, the native city of Luke.
The Gospel of Luke was written at about the same
time with that of Mark ; and as the latter appears to
have been designed particularly for the Romans, so
the former seems especially adapted to the Greeks.
Luke represents Christ as the Saviour of the world,
without distinction of nations, and traces his genealogy
through his mother Mary to Adam, the progenitor of
the whole human family ; in this particular afibrding
a contrast to the obviously Jewish complexion of the
first chapter of Matthew. He is circumstantial in nar-
rative, gives the dialogues of Christ with particularity,
and is careful to insert geographical notices of the
places in Palestine which he mentions (Luke i. 2G ; iv.
31; viii. 26; Acts i. 12).
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182 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Of all the evangelists he is the only one who gives a
detailed account of the circumstances which preceded
and attended the births of John Baptist and Jesus ;
and in this part of his Gospel the style is more strongly
Hebraistic than in any other part of the New Testa-
ment, if we except the Apocalypse. Luke probably
copied this narrative and the genealogy just as he found
them in the family of Elizabeth and Mary.
Luke was the companion of Paul in many of his
missionary journeys, as we see by the book of Acts ;
and it is said that after Paul's martyrdom he preached
in Italy, Dalmatia, Macedonia, Bithynia, and finally
suffered martyrdom at a very advanced age.
The witnesses to Luke's Gospel are Justin Martyr,
the Letter of the church of Vienne and. Lyons, Ire-
naeus, Tatian, Athenagoras, Theophilus, Clement of
Alexandria, TertuUian, Julius Africanus, Jerome.
A specimen of the testimony we subjoin.
TESTIMONIES TO LUKE.
Church of Vienne and Lyons. Of one of their breth-
ren they say ; " That though young, he equalled the
character of old Zacharias (Luke i. 6) ; for he walked
in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord
blameless." Lardner ii. 162. Euseb. E. H. v. 1.
Tatian (Luke vi. 25): "You may laugh, but you
will weep." Oration against the Gentiles, Lardner
ii. 150.
Tatian composed a harmony of the four Gospels, of
course including Luke. Euseb. E. II. iv. 29.
Athenagoras (Luke xvi. 18) : For whosoever, says
he, shall put away his wife, and shall marry another,
committeth adultery." Legat. Lardner ii. 196.
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 183
Theaphilua (Luke xviii. 27) : " For the things which
with men are impossible are possible with God." Ad.
Autol. Lardner ii. 205.
Irenaeua : " Luke, the companion of Paul, commit-
ted to writing the Gospel preached by him." Euseb.
E. a V. 8.
"Luke, also, the follower and disciple of the apos-
tles, referring to Zachariah and Elizabeth, of whom
according to th« promise of God, John was born, says
they were both righteous before God," etc. (Luke i.
6.) Adv. Haer. iii. 10.
Clement of Alexandria: "But Luke also in the
commencement of his narrative, premises the cause
which led him to write, showing that many others,
having rashly undertaken to compose a narration
of matters that he had already completely ascer-
tained, in order to free us from the uncertain supposi-
tions of others, in his own Gospel, he delivered the
certain account of those things, that he himself had
fully received from- his intimacy and stay with Paul,
and also, his intercourse with the other apostles."
Euseb. E. H. iii. 2, 4.
Origen : " The third (Gospel) is according to Luke,
the Gospel commended by Paul, which was written
for the converts from the Gentiles. Euseb, E. H.
VL 25.
"But Lucius some suppose to be Luke who wrote the
Gospel." Comment, ad Rom. xvi. 2
Justin Martyr: "As Christ indicated saying, To
whom God hath given the more, he will also require
the more of him." (Luke xii. 48.) Apol. i. 28.
" The power of God coming down upon the virgin
overshadowed her. And at that time an angel being
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sent to the virgin herself brought joyful tidings to
her." (Luke i. 35.) Apol. L 54.
*'As also you can learn from the census that
took place under Cyrenius, your first procurator in Jn-
dea." (Luke ii. 2.) Apol. i. 55.
" Therefore moved by fear, he did not put her away,
but when the first census was taken in Judea under
Cyrenius, he went from Nazareth where he dwelt to
Bethlehem where he originated, that he might be en-
rolled" (taxed). Luke ii. 1-5.) Apol. i. 303.
"For that is what our Lord said, they shall neither
marry nor be given in marriage, but shall be equal to
the angels, being children of God, and of the resurrec-
tion." (Luke XX. 35, 36.) Apol. i. 308.
" In the memoirs which I say were composed by the
apostles and those who followed them, we find that his
sweat was as great drops of blood, while he prayed
sajring, if it be possible let this cup pass from me."
(Luke xxii. 41.) Apol. i. 331.
" Yielding up his spirit upon the cross he said, Father
into thy hands I commit my spirit, as I have learned
this also from those memoirs." (Luke xxiii. 46.)
Apol. i. 333.
TertuUian: "For from those commentaries which
we have, Marcion seems to have selected Luke, whom
he mutilated. Moreover Luke was not an apostle but
an apostolic man, not a master but a disciple, as it were
less than a master, and so much the later certainly as
he was the companion of the later apostle Paul doubt-
less." Adv. Marcion iv. 2.
Julius Africanus. This writer compares the gene-
alogy of Luke with that of Matthew.
Euaehiua : " But Luke, who was bom at Antioch and
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 185
by profession a physician, being for the most part con-
nected with Paul, and familiarly acquainted with the
rest pf the apostles, has left us in two inspired books,
the institutes of that spiritual healing art which he
obtained from them. One of these is his Gospel, in
which he testifies that he has recorded as those who
were from the beginning eye witnesses and ministers
of the word, delivered to him, whom also he says he
has in all things followed." Ecc. Hist. iii. 4.
GOSPEL OF JOHN.
John, the son of Zebedee and Salome, and the
brother of James, was born in Bethsaida of Galilee,
the native city of Andrew and Peter (John i. 40 ; Matt.
iv. 18, 21). From the circumstances, that the father
of John owned vessels on the sea of Galilee, and
had hired servants in his employ ; and that his mother
was one of those who provided for the support of
Jesus and purchased costly spices for his embalming ;
and that he had a house in Jerusalem, and was person-
ally known to the high priest ; it is inferred that his
family were in possession of property, and of respect-
able rank. (Compare Mark i. 20; Matt, xxvii. 56;
Luke xxiiL 56 ; John xix. 27 ; xviii. 15.) These cir-
cumstances of superiority might possibly have embol-
dened the mother of James and John to make for
them the obnoxious request for precedence over the
other disciples (Matt. xx. 20-24; Mark. x. 35). His
mother was a devoted follower of Christ, but nothing
is said respecting the religious character of his father.
He was originally a disciple of John Baptist, and
was among the first to follow Christ (John i. 35).
Having afterwards returned to his business, he was one
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of the first whom Jesus called to the apostleship (Matt,
iv. 18, 21). Andrew and Peter, James and John were
the first chosen of the apostles ; three of them, Peter,
James and John, were selected by Jesus to witness the
glories of his transfiguration (Matt xvii. 1 ; Mark v. 37),
and the agonies of his humiliation in the garden ; two,
Peter and John, remained with him when all the others
forsook him and fled (John xviii 15) ; and one only
stood by him to the last and witnessed his death (John
xix. 26), and this one was John ; and to him the ex-
piring Jesus affectionately committed the care of his
mother, requesting him to discharge towards her the
duties of a son.
" Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother
and his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleopas, and
Mary Magdalene. When Jesus, therefore, saw his
mother, and the disciple standing by, whom he loved,
he said unto his mother. Woman, behold thy son!
Then saith he to the disciple. Behold thy mother!
And fi'om that hour that disciple took her unto his
own house."
Peter and John were first at the tomb of Christ,
after the news of his resurrection (John xx. 2-8).
According to ancient testimony, John was the
youngest of the apostles, and some four or five years
younger than Jesus, and the Gospel designates him as
the disciple whom Jesus loved.
He remained at Jerusalem, as Eusebius informs us,
till after the death of Jesus' mother and the imprison-
ment of Paul ; when he went to Ephesus, about A. D.
65, to take charge of the important church which Paul
had established there (Acts xix. 1-20). Soon after he
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 187
was banished to Patmos by Nero* (Rev. i 9), where
he wrote the Apocalypse. After a time he was re-
stored to Ephesus, where he established a theological
school, for the purpose of supplying the numerous
churches with competent pastors, as they could no
longer expect the continuance of miraculous qualifica-
tions. Hence he received the appellation of the theo-
logian or divine. While engaged in this employment,
he wrote his Gospel and Epistles ; and in the reign of
Trajan, he died a natural death at a very advanced
age. (Eusebius, EccL Hist. iii. 18, 23, 31, 39.)
Prom several instances recorded of him in the Gos-
pels, he seems to have been originally of an impetuous
and fiery temper, which by the influence of the Chris-
tian religion became entirely subdued, and produced
that warmth of aflfection, that soul stirring energy of
love, the softness, mildness, and richness of feeling,
which we so much admire in this beloved apostle.
(Luke ix. 49, 54, 55; Mark iii 17; ix. 38, 39.)
His Gospel probably was especially written for the
use of his theological students, and it is equally distin-
guished for the childlike simplicity of its language and
the depth and pathos of its sentiment. It is supple-
mentary to the others, and consists principally of the
* Nero was of the Domitian family, and his full familj designa-
tion was Nero Claudius Damitttu, or in the adjective form, Dom-
ITIANUS. This led to the misapprehension among some of the
andents that John suffered punishment under Domitian and not un-
der Neroj but this was by no means the case with all. The subject is
very thoroughly and sntisfactorily discussed by Guericke in his Mu"
leitung in das Neue Testament^ p. 59-65, and 522-530, and also by
Prof. Stuart in his Commentary on the Apocalypse, vol. i. p. 263-
282. The discussion is too wide and involved to be entered into here.
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188 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
discourses of Jesus, which are characterized by so
great freshness and naturalness, and so strong an ex-
citement of the most inward emotions, that we are
inclined to believe that they must be given nearly
word for word as they were uttered. The ancients,
on account of these peculiarities, called this the spir-
itual gospel ; and by a distinguished modern, Emesti,
it has been styled the heart of Jesua. Though the
most simple in its language, it is the most difficult of
all to be fiilly comprehended. There is great pecu-
liarity in the use of words, such as lights life^ word^ &c.,
and a depth of meaning which has not often been
folly explored. It is always a favorite book among
those who have full sympathy with the spirituality of
the Christian religion, but very mystical and obscure
to such as know Christianity only in its outward forms
and precepts.
Chrysostom, in speaking of this Gospel, expresses
himself in terms like the following : " K the spectators
of orators, musicians, and athletes, sit with so great
willingness to see and hear, how great readiness and zeal
should we manifest when, not a musician, not a sophist,
enters the scene, but a man speaking from the heavens
and uttering a voice more majestic than thunder ! For
he seizes and holds the world, and fills it with his
tones, not by a loud cry, but by moving his tongue
with divine grace : and what is wonderful, this voice,
though so great, is neither harsh nor unpleasant, but
sweeter, more persuasive, more enchanting than all the
harmony of music ; and besides all this, most holy and
most exciting, full of unspeakable glories, and convey-
ing so great blessings, that those who with readiness
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THE POUR GOSPELS. 189
ana diligence receive and retain them, are no longer
like mortal men, noi- do they abide upon earth, but
rise above all transitory things, and being transferred
to the angelic inheritance, so inhabit earth as if it were
heaven." (Preface to Homilies on John).
Augustin speaks with equal enthusiasm. " In the
four Gospels, or rather in the four books of the one
Gospel, John has not unaptly been compared to the
eagle on account of his etherial intelligence ; for he
carries his preaching to a much higher and more sub-
lime elevation than the other three, and in his eleva-
vation wills our hearts also to be raised. The other
three evangelists walked with the Lord as with a man
on earth, and said but little concerning his divinity ;
but John, as if it were irksome to him to remain on
earth, thunders, as.it were, in the very beginning of
his Gospel, rises not only above the earth and above
the whole circuit of the atmosphere and heavens, but
even above all the hosts of angels, and the whole order
of the invisible powers, and makes his way directly to
him by whom aU things are done, saying : * In the be-
ginning was the Word, and the Word was with God,
and the Word was God.' The rest of the Gospel cor-
responds to this great sublimity of its commencement.
He freely gave what he had freely received. For it is
not without reason, that it is said of him in this very
Gospel, that he leaned on the breast of the Lord at
the last supper. Prom that breast he imbibed in secret,
and what he had imbibed in secret he gave out openly."
(Tract, in Johan. 36.)
Origen also says, " It is not too much to affirm, that
as the Gospels are the chief of all writings, so the Gos-
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190 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
pel of John is the chief of the Gospels ; but no one
can understand it except by reclining on the bosom
of Jesus ; and so far, indeed, he must become another
John, as John by sympathy becomes another Jesua"
(Com. in Johan.)
But the most characteristic description of the pecu-
liar style of John is by Matthias Claudius, an eccentric
German Moiter. He says, " It delights me most of all
to read in St. John. There is in him something so
entirely wonderful, twilight and night, and through it
the swiftly darting lightning — a soft evening cloud, and
behind the cloud the broad ftill moon bodily ; some-
thing so deeply, sadly pensive, so high, so full of an-
ticipation, that one can not have enough of it In
reading John, it is with me always as though I saw
him before me, lying on the bosom of his Master, at
the last supper ; as though his angel were holding the
light for me, and in certain passages would fall upon
my neck, and whisper something in my ear.
" I am far from understanding everything which I
read, but it often seems to me as if what John meant,
were floating before me in the distance; and even
where I look into a passage altogether dark, I have a
foretaste of some great, glorious meaning, which I
shall one day understand, and for this reason I grasp
so eagerly after every new interpretation of the Gos-
pel of John. Indeed the most of them only crisp*
* See Goethe's Faust. Scene first, " Tour speeches I saj, whidi
are so highly polished, in which je crisp the shreds of humanity, are
unrefreehing as the mist-wind which whistles through the withered
leaves in autumai''
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THE POUR GOSPELS. 191
the evening cloud, and the moon behind has quiet
rest" (Claudius's Works, vol. i. p. 9.)
The witnesses to John's Gospel are Barnabas, Pastor
Hermas, Clement of Rome, Papias, Ignatius, Justin
Martyr, the Letter to Diognetus, the Letter of the
Churches of Vienne and Lyons, Irenaeus, Polycrates,
Tatian, Athenagoras, Theophilus, Clement of Alexan-
dria, Tertullian, Caius of Rome, Origen, Dionysius of
Alexandria, Eusebius, Dorotheus of Tyre, Victorinus
of Pettau, Epiphanius, Jerome.
Theodore of Mopsuestia, who lived in the latter
part of the fourth century, preserves the following
curious tradition respecting John's Gospel, which is
well worthy of regard. Towards the close of the
apostle's long life, the first three Gospels were laid
before him by his neighboring ministers, to which he
gave his sanction, but said that important particulars
had been omitted, and at their earnest request, he sup-
plied those omissions in the Gospel which he then
wrote. (Wordsworth on Canon, p. 136-7.)
We now give a specimen of the testimony above
referred to.
Ignatius : " He also is the gate of the Father, by
whom enter in Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and the
prophets and the apostles and the churcL (John x.
9.) Ad PhiladelpL c. 9.
" Wherefore as the Lord without the Father doeth
nothing." (John viii 28.) Ad Magn. c. 7.
" But living water, also speaking in me says within
me, come to the Father ; I rejoice not in corruptible
food, no^: in the pleasures of this life ; I desire the
bread of God, the heavenly bread, the bread of life,
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192 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
which is the flesh of Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
afterward bom of the seed of David, and I desire the
drink which is the blood, which is love incorruptible
and life eternal." (John vL 32, 33, 45 ; xlv. 51-58.)
Ad Rom. c. 7.
Justin Martyr : " For Christ himself says, except ye
be bom again ye can not enter into the kingdom of
heaven." (John iii. 4. 5.) ApoL i. 89.
"And Jesus Christ was begotten, the only genuine
Son of God, being His Word." (John i. 1, 19.)
ApoL ii 68.
" But the Word of God is His Son." Apol. ii. 95.
" By the Word of God Jesus Christ our Saviour
was made flesh." (John i. 14.) ApoL ii. 98.
" But the men supposed him (John Baptist) to be
Christ, among whom he cried, I am not the Christ, but
the voice of one crying, etc." (John i 20, 23.) Dial
p. 316.
" And he gave himself to be touched by them, and
he showed the prints of the nails in his hands. (John
XX. 27.) De Resurrect.
Epistle to Diognetus : " This (the Word) is the same
who was from the beginning." (John i 1.)
Epistle of the Churches at Vienne and Lyons : "And
that was fulfilled which was predicted by our Lord in
these words. The time will come when whosoever kill-
eth you will think he doeth God service." (John xvi
2.) Euseb. R H. v. 1.
Bdmabas^ xiL : " And again Moses makes a type of
Jesus, to show that he was to die, and then that he,
whom they thought to be dead, was to give life to
others ; in the type of those that fell in IsraeL For
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THE POUR GOSPELS. 193
God caused all sorts of serpents to bite them, and they
died ; forasmuch as by a serpent, transgression began
in Eve ; that so he might convince them that for their
transgressions they shall be delivered into the pain of
death. Moses then himself, who had commanded
them, saying, Ye shall not make to yourselves any
graven or molten image, to be your god, yet now did
so himself, that he might represent to them the figure
of the Lord Jesus. For he made a brazen serpent,
and set it up on high, and called the people together
by a proclamation ; where being come, they entreated
Moses that he would make an atonement for them, and
pray that they might be healed." (John iii. 14.)
Pastor Hermas : " But the door is the Son of God,
who is the only access to God. No one therefore will
enter in to God otherwise than by his Son." (John x.
7-9.) Simil. ix. 12.
Clement of Rome : " Our Lord Jesus Christ,
being beaten by the servants of the high priest, an-
swered, If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil,
but if well, why smitest thou me." Kirchhofer, p. 144
Irenaeus: "Afterwards John, the disciple of our
Lord, the same that lay upon his bosom, also published
the Gospel, while he was yet at Ephesus in Asia."
Euseb. E. H. v. 8.
" All the elders testify, who were conversant with
John the disciple of our Lord in Asia, that John deliv-
ered these things." Adv. Haer. ii. 22.
" John, the disciple of our Lord, announcing this
faith thus began, in the doctrine
which is according to the Gospel, In the beginning
was the Word." (John i 1.) Adv. Haer. iii. 11.
13
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194 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Polycrate8: "Moreover John, who rested on the
bosom of our Lord, who was a friend that bore the
sacerdotal plate, and a teacher and witness, lies buried
at Ephesus." (John xiii. 23.) Euseb. E. H. iii. 31.
Tatian : " All things were made by him, and with-
out him was not anything made." (John i. 3.) Orat
cont. Grace. 158,
" And this also is said, The darkness did not com-
prehend the light. The word indeed is the light of
God." (John i. 5.) Orat 132.
" God is a spirit." (John iv. 24.) Orat. p. 144.
Athenagoras : " But the Son of God is the Word
of the Father, in idea and in work ; for by him and
through him were all things made, the Father and the
Son being one ; the Son being in the Father and the
Father in the Son by the union and power of the
Spirit, for the Son of God is both the mind and the
Word of the Father." (John i. 3 ; x. 30, 38.) Legat. 10.
" For God was from the beginning, being eternal
mind ; and He himself had the word in himself being
eternally endowed with the Word. (John i. 1, 2.)
Legat. 10.
Theophilus : " As the Holy Scriptures and all who
have the Spirit teach us, among whom John says. In
the beginning was the Word and the Word was with
God ; signifying that God alone was in the beginning
and that the Word was in Him. And then he says,
The Word was God, and all things were made by
Him, and without Him there was not anything made."
(John i. 1-3.) Ad. Autol. ii
Clement of Alexandria : "John, last of all, perceiv-
ing that what had reference to the body in the Gospel
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THE POUR GOSPELS. 195
of our Saviour was suflBciently detailed, and being en-
couraged by his particular friends and urged by the
Spirit, he wrote a spiritual Gospel." Euseb. E. H. vi.
14, compare iii. 24.
TertuUtan : " Of the apostles, John and Matthew
publish the faith to ua" Ad. Marc. iv. 2.
Origen : " What shall we say of him who reclined
on the breast of Jesus, I mean John ? who has left one
Gospel, in which he confesses that he could write so
many that the whole world could not contain them."
Euseb. E. H. vi. 25.
Dionysius of Alexandria : "The Gospel and Epistle
(of John) mutually agree ; for the one says. In the
beginning was the Word, and the other, That which
was from the beginning ; the one says. The Word was
made flesh and dwelt among us, and we saw his glory,
the glory as of the only begotten of the Father ; the
other says the same things a little altered, That which
we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, and
which our hands have handled of the Word of life,
and the life was manifested." Euseb. E. H. vii 25.
VictoriniLs of Pettau : " For he (John) aftei-wards
wrote the Gospel" Lardner iv. 211.
Doro(heu8 of Tyre : " John, the brother of James,
who was made the evangelist of the Lord, whom also
the Lord loved, proclaimed in Asia the Gospel of the
Lord Jesus Christ." De Vit et mort proph.
Evsebiua : " The Gospel of John comprehends the
first events of Christ, but the others the history that
took place at the latter part of the time. It is proba-
ble therefore that for these reasons John has passed
by in silence the genealogy of our Lord, because it
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196 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
was written by Matthew and Luke ; but that he com-
menced with the doctrine of the divinity, as a part
reserved for him by the divine Spirit, as if for a supe-
rior. Let this sufl&ce to be said respecting the Gospel
of John." Eccl. Hist. iii. 24.
Epiphanius : " Wherefore also the blessed John com-
ing, and seeing men busying themselves with the lower
coming of Christ, and the Ebionites deducing the
bodily genealogy of Christ from Abraham ....
. .. . said not that the Word
of God, whom the Father begat from eternity was
from Mary alone, nor from Joseph the husband of the
virgin, but, In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and tfie Word was God." Haer.
Ixix. 23.
Jerome : " The apostle John, whom Jesus especially
loved, the son of Zebedee and the brother of the apos-
tle James, whom Herod beheaded after the passion of
our Lord, wrote the Gospel last of all, being called
thereto by the bishops of Asia, against Cerinthus and
other heretics, and especially the dogmas of the
Ebionites, who assert that Christ did not exist before
Mary." CataL Scrip. Eccl. c. 9.
" He wrote this Gospel in Asia, after he had written
the Apocalypse in the island of Patmos — the last of
the Gospels." Praef in Cod. Antiq.
RELATION OF THE GOSPELS TO EACH OTHER.
In the four evangelists, we have a fourfold picture
of the Saviour ; the same perfect character as it im-
pressed its image on four minds of diflferent structure
and habits ; and the picture in each instance receives
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 197
a different shade of coloring in consequence of the
particular purpose and genius of each writer.
Matthew developes the character of Christ in the
way best adapted to take hold of the devout Jews,
looking for the hope of their fathers as promised in
the Old Testament Mark writes for the grave, severe,
matter of fact Roman; Luke, for the versatile and
learned Greek, whose eager curiosity could never sleep
— ^and John, for the deeply reflecting, philosophical
spirit, which feels keenly the want of that which earth
cannot afford, and whose intense desires remain unsat-
isfied amid all the physical and intellectual luxuries
that satiate the rest of mankind Matthew exhibited
the human and subordinate ; John, the spiritual and
divine of the Redeemer ; Mark, his ofl&cial character ;
and Luke, his personal history.
In the four we have Jesus represented to us as the
Messiah, the Teacher, the Pattern, and the God (Com-
pare Olshausen's Introduction to his Commentary on
the New Testament.)
Throughout the Bible, God recognizes the principle
of approaching different minds by different means, and
has so arranged his word that no constitutional pecul-
iarity remains untouched Whatever may be your pe-
culiar temperament or habits of mind, in the Bible you
will find a Redeemer adapted to your wants, and a Gos-
pel suited to your condition. Try the character and
claims of Jesus by the various and pressing spiritual
necessities of men, and see how exactly he answers to
them all ; with what certainty he leads every variety
of character submitted to his direction towards its own
proper perfection ; by what appropriate methods he
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198 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
corrects every evU disposition and soothes every sor-
row ; how equally he reveals himself to the most en-
lightened and the least instructed of those who make
him their Saviour ; how uniformly all his precepts are
fitted to the nature and condition of men and tend to
promote their highest happiness ; how strong a hold
he has on the warmest and most devoted affections of
all who choose him for their friend ; with what unde-
viating confidence they trust him, and with what un-
shaken faith they preserve the consciousness of his
presence and love ; and how this confidence and faith,
when regulated by his instructions, never fails to im-
part unalloyed improvement to the intellect and the
affections ; how hope by his influence continues steady
through every kind of worldly trial, and brightens to
rapturous vision when man is called to nature's last
struggle — consider, also, that all this influence has been
steadily increasing fi'om its first commencement, and
that the number, the zeal, the intelligence, and the
power of those who act under it, was never so great
as at the present time, and never so rapidly increasing
— contemplate all this, as it actually occurs in this
cold, sensual world ; and awed by a miracle really more
stupendous than the darkness and the earthquake, the
rending rocks and the opening graves of the cruci-
fixion-day, will you not exclaim with the Koman sol-
dier, Truly this man was the Son of God! (Mark
XV. 39.)
I ask the reader's careful attention to the following
extracts from Augustin, as admirably translated by
Dr. Wordsworth, in the introduction to his Commen
tary on the New Testament. I insert them here be-
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THE FOUR QOSP£LS. 199
cause the fathers had ways of looking at the books of
the Bible, which in our day have nearly become obso-
lete, and which ought in some measure at least to be
revived. The incredulity of our own times in regard
to the Bible, is due, not so much to the want of evi-
dence as to the want of that reverence and aflFection
and admiration of the Scriptures, which so distinguished
the Christians of the early ages.
" We concur with those," says St Augustin^ " who,
in interpreting the Vision of the Four Living Crea-
tures in the Apocalypse, which represent the Four
Gospels, assign the lAon^ the King of all Beasts, to
St Matthew ; and the Ox^ the Sacrificial Victim, to St
Lvke. The Apocalypse itself says, ^The Lion of the
Tribe of Jvdah prevailed to open the book;' and
thus it designates the Lion as symbolical of Christ our
King.
" St Mark follows St. Matthew, and relates what
Christ did in His Human Nature, without special refer-
ence to His functions as King or Priest, and is there-
fore fitly symbolized in the Apocalyptic vision as the
Han.
*' These three Living Creatures — the Lion, the Ox,
the Man — walk on the earth. The first three Evange-
lists describe especially those things which Christ did
in our flesh, and relate the precepts which He deliv-
ered on the duties to be performed by us while we
walk on earth and dwell in the flesh. But St. John
soars to heaven as an Eagle, above the clouds of human
infirmity, and reveals to us the mysteries of Christ's
Godhead, and of the Trinity in Unity, and the felici-
ties of Life Eternal ; and gazes on the Light of Im-
mutable Truth with a keen and steady ken.
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200 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
*' The first three Evangelists inculcate the practical
duties of Active Life ; St. John dwells on the ineffa-
ble mysteries of the Contemplative : the former speak
of Labour, the last speaks of Rest: the former lead
the Way, the last shows our Home. In the fonner we
are cleansed from sin, in the last we enjoy the beatific
Vision promised to the pure in heart who will see God.
" He, who is the last in order, declares more fully
the Divine Nature of Christ, by which he is Equal to
and One with the Father, and in which He made the
World ; as if this Evangelist, who reclined on the bo-
som of Christ at Supper, had imbibed in a larger
stream the mystery of His Divinity from His lips.
" This Evangelic Quaternion is the fourfold Car of
the Lord, upon which He rides throughout the world,
and subdues the Nations to His easy yoke. The Mys-
tery of His Royalty and Priesthood, which was fore-
told by Prophecy, is proclaimed in the Gospel. The
same Lord Christ, Who sent the Prophets before His
descent from heaven into this world, has now sent His
Apostles after His Ascension. He is the Head of all
His Disciples; and since His Disciples have written
those things which He did and said, we are not to
aflSrm with some, that Christ wrote nothing. They
wrote, as His members, what they knew from the dic-
tation of Him who is their Head. Whatsoever He
willed that we should know of His own Words aiid
Deeds, this he commanded them to write, as it were,
by His own hand. Whoever, therefore, rightly com-
prehends the fellowship of Unity, and the Ministry of
His Members acting harmoniously in different func-
tions under their Divine Head, will receive what he
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THE FOUR GOSPELS. 201
reads in the Gospel from the narration of the Evange-
lists, with no other feeling than if he saw the very
hand of Christ Himself, which He has in His own
body, performing the act of writing.
In the first three Evangelists, the gifts of active
virtue, — ^in the last, St. John, those of contemplative,
shine forth. To one man is given by tJie Spirit the
tvord of wisdom ; to another the word of knowledge by
the same Spirit One drinks wisdom from the bosom
of Christ ; another man is raised to the third heaven^
and hears unutterable words. But as long as they are
in the body, all are absent from the Lord. And all
who believe with good hope, and are written in the
Book of Life, have this promise reserved to them, —
I will love him^ and will manifest Myself to him. In
proportion as we make greater progress in knowledge
and intelligence in this mortal pilgrimge of life, let us
be more and more on our guard against two devilish
sins. Pride and Envy. Let us remember, that as St.
John elevates us more and more to the contemplation
of the Truth, so much the more does he instruct us in
the sweetness of Love. That precept is most health-
ful and true, — The greater thou art^ the more humble
Uiyself and thou shalt find favour before the Lord. The
Evangelist who reveals to us Christ more sublimely
than the rest, he also shows us the humility of Christ
washing His Disciples' feet"
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Another remark of St. Angustin's has in it so much
of good sense, and is so far in advance of the opin-
ions of many even at the present day, that I am hap-
py to make place for it here :
'* There are varieties, but not contrarieties, in the
Gospels ; and by means of these varieties we may
learn some very useful and necessary truths. We are
thus reminded that the main thing for us, is to ascer-
tt^in the meaning to which the words are ministerial ;
and we are not to imagine that the Sacred Writers
deceive us because they do not give us the precise words
of Him whose meaning they desire to express. Other-
wise we shall be like mere miserable caterers at sylla-
bles, (mistri aucupea vocum^) who imagine that the
truth is to be tied to the points of letters; whereas,
not in words only, but also in all other symbols of the
mind, it is the mind itself which is to be sought for,"
Wordsworth on the Gospels, p. xlvii
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CHAPTER SEVENTH,
THE APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS.
COHPABISON OP THE CANONICAL GOSPELS WITH THE APOC-
RYPHAL GOSPELS STILL EXTANT.
The impugners of the New Testament Gospels ap-
peal to the fact, that there are gospels acknowledged
to be apocryphal, as a proof of their theory that our
recognized Gospels are also myths or forgeries. Any
one who candidly examines these spurious gospels, and
compares them with the New Testament, will find in
them, not a refiitation of our sacred writers, but a
most convincing testimony to their intelligence, hon-
esty and supernatural inspiration. So totally diverse
are they from the genuine Gospels in conception, in
spirit, in execution, in their whole impression, in all
respects so entirely unlike, so immeasurably inferior,
that the New Testament only shines the brighter by
the contrast. They have scarcely so much resemblance
to the genuine Gospels as the monkey has to a man.
The inspiration of the canonical books is proved
quite as strongly by what they omit as by what they
insert ; and this ray of evidence shines out very clearly
on a comparison of the apocryphal gospels with the
Gospels of the New Testament.
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204 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
An elaborate history and collection of these writings
was first published by Fabricius near the beginning
of the last century. The first volume of a new and
critical edition was issued at Halle by Thilo in 1832.
Prof Norton has given an account of them in the third
volume of his work on the Genuineness of the Gos-
pels, but with an incredulity in regard to the testimo-
ny of the ancients which amounts almost to credu-
lousness ; yet it is very useful to be studied in connec-
tion with other and more credulous authorities. Ull-
mann gives a very good abstract of them in his treatise
entitled Hiatorisch oder Mythisch^ and Guericke in his
Introduction to the New Testament makes a brief and
intelligible catalogue of them. Quite recently Dr.
IIoflFmann of Leipzig has compiled a life of Jesus ac-
cording to the Apocrypha, accompanied with learned
annotations. English translations of the principal apoc-
ryphal writings of the New Testament have been col-
lected and published both in England and the United
States. ^ this has been done with any purpose of
bringing discredit on our genuine New Testament, the
design has most signally failed, for on every fair minded
and intelligent reader, they must produce directly the
opposite eflFect.
Fabricius gave the titles of about fifty of such spu-
rious writings, and the industry of subsequent investi-
gations has added to the number ; but scarcely one-
tenth part of these are now extant, and probably there
were never more than ten or a dozen distinct works of
the kind, the others being different recensions of the
same narrative, or different titles of the same work, or
mere repetitions of each other. The best editions of
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 205
the apocryphal gospels are the two following, to wit,
that by Thilo, published at Halle in 1832, who gives
twelve ; and that by Tischendorf, published at Leipsic
in 1854, who gives twenty-two. Not all of them,
however, can with propriety be called gospels. Ma-
homet derives his idea of Christ almost entirely from
the apocryphal gospels, not at all trom the genuine.
THE APOCRYPHAL GOSPELa
Not more than seven of these now remain, which
are worthy of notice, three of them in the Greek
language, two in the Latin, and two in the Arabic.
They are the following :
1. The Protevangelium of James the brother of the
Lardy of which the full original title is this : Declara-
tion and history how the most holy mother of God teas
bom for our salvation. This seems to be the most
ancient and valuable of these books ; it was first made
known in Europe by W. Postel, about the middle of
the sixteenth century, and was published by Fabricius
in his Codex Apoc. Nov. Test. The principal part of
it is occupied (cap. 1-20) with the history of the birth
and childhood of Mary, and the circumstances attend-
ing the birth of Christ. Then foUowa briefly and
much in the manner of our Gospels (cap. 21, 22) the
visit of the Magi and the flight into Egypt ; and it
concludes (cap. 23, 24) with an extended description
of the murder of Zachariah, the father of John the
Baptist. The style of this gospel is far more simple
and pure than that of any other of these apocryphal
narratives, though in this respect, as in all others, it is
immeasurably below the canonical books. Some things
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206 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
mentioned in it are alluded to by Justin Martyr and
Clemens Alexandrinus, and the book is expressly
quoted by Origen. It was in existence, at least a part
of it, as early as the third century, though it was much
later than that, before it was ascribed to the brother
of our Lord^ or took the title of Protevangeltum. It
was for a long time held in high estimation by the
Greek church, and publicly read at their festivals,
especially those which pertained to Mary. Very prob-
ably many of the early church traditions respecting
Mary are preserved in it ; and in this respect it may
gratify a curiosity for which the canonical Gospels
make very little provision.
2. The Greek Gospel of Thomas. This is one of the
most extravagant of the apocryphal books, and pro-
fesses to give a minute account of Jesus from the fifth
to the twelfth year of his age. It is filled with mira-
cles which are wholly ridiculous, and some of them
decidedly immoral and malevolent. The beginning
and close of the book are very fragmentary. Irenaeus
(adv. Haer. i. 17) refers to some things contained in
the book, and Origen (Hom. in Luc. i.) expressly men-
tions it There is not a shadow of probability that it
was written* by Thomas the apostle. It is evidently of
heretical origin, and was highly esteemed and in great
use among the Manichaeans. It is probably of con-
siderably later date than the preceding one, and its
Greek style is very impure.
3. The Greek Gospel of Nicodemus. This, next to
the Protevangeltum^ is the most important and respect-
able, as well as the most widely circulated of the apoc-
ryphal gospels. It is divided into two unequal parts,
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 207
which seem originally to have been separate works.
The first part (cap. 1-1 6) contains a minute description
of the examination of Jesus before Pilate, and of his
crucifixion and resurrection, and appears to be a re-
modelling and amplification of certain epistles and acts "
of Pilate^ which are very early mentioned, but have
not come down to us in a reliable shape. (See Justin
Martyr, Apol. i. 76, 84; Tertull. Apol. 21 ; Oros. Hist
vii 4; Euseb H. E. ii. 2.) It is probably of Jewish-
Christian origin, and written for the purpose of affect-
ing unbelieving Jews by the example of Annas and
Caiaphas, who, it alleges, were converted by the testi-
mony of Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea.
The second part (cap. 19-27) describes Christ's de-
scent into Hades and the wonderful things he accom-
plished there. This is apparently more modern than
the first part. Some Latin manuscripts have an addi-
tional chapter, in which Annas and Caiaphas make
oath before Pilate that they are convinced, from all
the testimony, that the Jesus, condemned and executed
at their instigation, is truly the Son of God. There
are also printed with it, by Thilo, letters of Pilate to
the emperors Claudius and Tiberius.
The book, in its present form, can not have been
earlier than the fifth century, and was probably much
later. It is not expressly mentioned until the thirteenth
century. The prologue, which states that it was writ-
ten in the Hebrew language by Nicodemus in the time
of Christ, and translated into Greek by a Jewish
Christian, named Ananias, during the reign of the
emperor Theodosius, is evidently a mere fiction. The
book was held in high esteem during the middle ages,
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208 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
and before the invention of the art of printing it had
been translated into Latin, Gaelic, Anglo-Saxon, Ger-
man and French.
4. The Latin Gospel of the Nativity of Mary. This
probably belongs to the sixth century. The prologue,
which states that it was written by Matthew, and trans-
lated into Latin by Jerome, deserves no regard. It
goes over the same ground as the Protevangelium } but
is more minute as to the birth of Mary, and more con-
densed on the other points.
5. The Latin History of the Nativity of Mary and
of the Infancy of the Saviour. The first part (cap. 1-
17) from the annunciation of Mary to the Bethlehem
massacre, follows mainly the Protevangelium^ though
with considerable variations and amplifications ; while
the latter part, the childhood of the Saviour, is more
like the apocryphal books which we find in the Arabic
language.
6. The Arabic History of Joseph the Carpenter, In
this book, Christ is introduced as discoursing with his
disciples, and gives them a long and marvelous account
of the life, death and burial of Joseph. Its Arabic
style has an air of antiquity about it, though it is some-
what bombastic. It seems to be the product of a Jew-
ish Christian, and a translation from the Hebrew. It
may possibly, in its present form, be as early as the
third or fourth century.
7. The Arabic Gospel of the Childhood of the Re-
deemer. This book was in high esteem among the
Nestorians, and may have been the product of some
Nestorian Christian of the fifth or sixth century, and
originally written in Syriac. Cap. 1-9 relates minutely
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 209
the birth of Christ; 10-26 the flight into Egypt, and
the wonderful miracles wrought by his presence, his
clothes, the water in which he had been washed, etc. ;
27-35 another course of miracles through the instiga-
tion of Mary ; 36-49 miracles wrought by the boy of
bis own accord, all of them childish, some of them
obscene ; and cap. 50 relates a visit made to the tem-
ple at Jerusalem.
ABSTRACT OF TBB APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS.
Having thus given an account of these books, it
remains that we present an outline of their contents, in
order to afford opportunity for a comparison between
them and the genuine. To avoid repetition, it will be
most convenient to do this in the form which Ullmann
has adopted in the work above referred to, namely, by
grouping into one view what is said in the different .
books respecting the same person or subject Each
subject, however, has some one book particularly de-
voted to it, so that an analysis of a subject is generally
the analysis of a book We begin with
Joseph. According to the Arabic History of Joseph
(No. 6), Christ, seated in the midst of his disciples
on the mount of Olives, relates for substance the fol-
lowing story: "Joseph, well acquainted with the arts
and sciences, was a priest in the temple of the Lord ;
but he pursued his carpenter's trade, and lived, even
in Egypt, by the labor of his hands, that, according
to the law, he might not, for his support, be charge-
able to any one. He Was highly distinguished, not
only by his intellectual qualities, but also by the phys-
ical ; he never suffered from weakness, his sight never
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210 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
failed, he never lost a tooth nor had the toothache, he
never lost his presence of mind, he always walked
erect, he never had a pain in his limbs, and was always
fresh and cheerful for labor. He lived to be a hun-
dred and twelve years old, and it was not till near the
close of his life that he felt any diminution of the live-
liness and vigor of his mind or body, or lost in any
degree his interest in his handicraft. An angel an-
nounced to him his approaching death. He prayed
.God not to permit frightfiiUooking demons to come
in his way, nor the gate-keepers of paradise to obstruct
the entering in of his soul, nor the lions to rush upon
him, nor the waves of the fiery sea, through which
his soul must pass, to qverwhelm him, before he had
seen the glory of God. In the anguish of death Jo-
seph cursed himself, his life, the day of his birth, the
breasts he had sucked ; he heaped up all kinds of ac-
cusations against himself, besides original sin, all kinds
of actual sin, untruthfulness, hypocrisy, reproachful-
ness, fraud, and many others. In this distress he calls
upon Jesus, the Nazarene, as his Saviour and deliverer,
his Lord and God, begs his pardon that he, through
ignorance, had sinned against the mystery of his mirac-
ulous birth by an unworthy suspicion, and then con-
dudes, ' 0 my Lord and God, be not angry, and con-
demn me not on account of that hour ; I am thy serv-
ant, and the son of thy handmaid, and thou art my
Lord, my God and Saviour, the Son of God in truth.'
This earnest prayer of Joseph not to be forsaken, being
satisfactory, Jesus laid his hand upon the bosom of the
dying man, and perceived that his soul was about to
flee out of his mouth ; and from the south he sees
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 211
death and hell approaching with their fiery troop ; and
then, at his prayer, the archangels Michael and Gabriel
appear, receive the soul of Joseph, enfold it in a
lustrous garment, and protect it from the demons
of darkness, which are found on the way. At the
lamentations of the family, Nazareth and Galilee come
together and take part in the mourning. Jesus utters
a prayer which he had composed before he was born
of Mary, and as soon as he says 'Amen,' a multitude of
the heavenly host draws near ; he commands one of
them to spread out a resplendent shroud, and therein
enwrap the body of Joseph. Then he blessed the
dead ; no smell of death should proceed from him, no
worm should touch him, no limb should be decom-
posed, no hair should fall from his head ; but he should
remain entire and uninjured till the millennial feast.
Afterwards the most distinguished men in the city
come to array Joseph in his grave-clothes, but they
can not remove from him the linen garment ; so closely
and immovably does it adhere to his body, that they
can not find a single fold by which they can seize hold
of it."
The apostles, to whom Jesus relates all this, only
wonder that Joseph, the just one, whom Jesus calls
his father, whose festival by the command of Jesus all
the world must annually celebrate, was not, by the
miraculous power of Jesus, made immortal, like Enoch
and Elijah. To this Jesus replies, that by Adam all
men without exception, who descended from him, are
made mortal — that this is the fate which even Enoch
and Elijah, who as yet retain their bodies, will experi-
ence at the final consummation, when four will be slain
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212 THE BOOKd OF THE BIBLE.
by Anti-Christ, namely, Enoch and Elijah, Shilo and
Tabitha.
Towards the close of the book the celebration ef
Joseph's festival is most eiamestly enjoined, as also the
copying and circulaiting of this history of Joseph.
Whoever, on the festival of Joseph, distributes alms,
or oflFers gifts and prayers, shall be rewarded thirty,
sixty, and a hundred fold ; whoever copies the history
of his life, him will Christ commend to the special pro-
tection of God for perfect absolution ; the poor, who
have nothing to give, must at least give the name of
Joseph to a new bom son, and thus protect him from
poverty and sudden death; and finally, as Christ in
the canonical Gospels says, " Go and teach all nations,"
so here he says, " Proclaim to them the death of my
father Joseph, celebrate his birth with a yearly festi-
val ; and he who adds to this word or takes from it, is
guilty of sin."
In reading such a gospel as this, what a totally dif-
ferent atmosphere we breathe from that of the canoni-
cal Gospels! We are transported at once to another
age, to a different planet, to a totally diverse world
of ideas. It is as different from the New Testament
Gospels as Jack the Giant-killer is from Bunyan's Pil-
grim's Progress. Yet it was written in or near the
same country as the canonical Gospels, and probably
not many generations later.
Mary. Here we derive our information mainly
from the book abeady quoted (No. 6), from the Pro-
tevangelium (No. 1), from the Gospel of the NoMviiy
of Mary (No. 4), and from the History of the Natimty
of Mary (No. 5). In the History of Joseph (No. 6),
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APOCRYPHAL QOSPELS. 213
Jesus makes the following statements respecting his
mother, namely, that when she was thi-ee years old she
was brought into the temple and remained there nine
years, till she was twelve. At the close of this period,
on consultation with the priests, that the change of
coBstitutioa might not occur to her in the temple, and
thereby God be incensed, it was resolved to give her
to a just and pious man. Twelve venerable men from
the tril>e of Judah were called together, and the lot
cast, by which she was given, to Joseph, who took her
away. With Joseph Mary found children of a former
marriage, among them James, whom she brought ]ip,
and thence she was called the mother of James, In
the fourteenth year of Mary's age, Christ, with the ap-
probation of the Father, and the concurrence of the
Holy Ghost, accomplished through her his incarnation,
being born in a mysterious way which no created be-
ing can understand. The birth, on account of which
Joseph went with Mary to Bethlehem, occurred in that
prophetic city in a cave near the grave of R^ichel.
Satan inform,ed Herod of it, and this occasioned the
persecution and flight into Egypt Says Jesus : " Then
Joseph arose and took my mother, and I rested in her
bosom, and Salome accompanied us on our journey to
Egypt" The family remained in Egjrpt a year, and
Jesus relates all the circumstances, as if he hs^i the
most perfect recollection of them.
The account of Mary in the Protevangelium is far
more minute and circumstantial In this narrative she
is in a miraculous manner promised to her parents,
Joachim and Anna, who had long been childless, and
mourned and suffered much on that account When
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214 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Mary was six months old, her mother put her on the
floor to see whether she could stand, and she walked
seven steps and then came back to the arms of hex-
mother. In her third year she was brought into the
temple attended by a company of pure virgins, and
was received by the high priest with the eulogistic
words : " Mary, the Lord hath exalted thy name among
all generations, and in the last days God will reveal to
thee the treasures of his redemption for the sons of
Israel." Then the high priest placed her on the third
step of the altar, and she sprang upon her feet and the
wimple house of Israel loved her. Mary was now
brought up like a dove in the temple of the Lord, and
received her food from the hand of an angel. By a
revelation made to the high priest, at twelve years of
age she must be betrothed to an Israelite for her pro-
tection, and this her protector must be pointed out by
a divine token. All the widowers of the people were
to come together with their staves ; and he on whose
staff the sign appeared, was to take her away. A
dove flew out from the staff of Joseph, the last one,
and rested upon his head ; and then, notwithstanding
his reluctance, Mary was given to him.
When Mary first went out to draw water, she heard
a voice : " Hail, thou favored one, the Lord is with
thee, blessed art thou among women." She looked
about her to the right and left to see whence the voice
proceeded ; and when she returned to the house, the
angel of the Lord met her, and announced to her
that she would be the mother of the Son of Grod.
Joseph, when he sometime after returned from hLs
work, was exceedingly shocked at the appearance of
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BETHLEHEM.
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 215
Mary, and broke out into the most bitter complaints
against her, both on her account and on his own. She
resolutely asserted her purity. The affair came to the
ears of the high priest, who called them before him
and loaded them with reproaches. Mary affirmed that
she was pure, and Joseph that he was innocent ; and
they both passed the ordeal by drinking the water of
proof, and with a result so clear that the high priest
acquitted them. Soon after, on account of the enroll-
ment, they took their journey to Bethlehem ; and on
the way Joseph, perceiving that Mary is sometimes sad
and sometimes laughing, inquires of her the cause.
She answers : " I see two nations before mine eyes, the
one sighing and weeping, the other exulting and laugh-
ing." When the time of her delivery drew near,
Joseph placed her in a cave and went out to seek a
nurse. And here for a few sentences we will give the
narrative literally as it is contained in the gospel.
" As I was going (said Joseph) I looked up into
the air and I saw the clouds astonished, and .the fowls
of the air stopping in the midst of their flight. And
I looked down towards the earth, and I saw a table
spread, and working people sitting around it, but their
hands were upon the table and they did not move to
eat. They who had meat in their mouths did not eat,
they who lifted their hands to the table did not draw
them back, and they who lifted them up to their
mouths, did not put anything in, but all their faces
were fixed upwards. And I beheld there sheep dis-
persed, and yet the, sheep stood still, and the shepherd
lifted up his hand to smite them, and his hand contin-
ued up. And I looked into the river, and saw the
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216 THB BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
kids with their mouths close to the water, and touch-
ing it, but they did not drink. Then I beheld a wo-
man coming down from the mountains, and she said to
me, ' Whither art thou going, 0 man ? ' And I saic|
to her, 'I go to inquire fot a Hebrew midwife.' She
replied to me, ' Where is the woman that is to be de-
livered ? ' And I answered, ' In the cave, and she is
betrothed to me.' I'hen said the midwife, ' Is she not
thy wife ? ' Joseph Answered, * It is Mary, who was
feducated in the holy of holies, in the house of the
Lord, and she fell to me by lot, and is not my wife,
but hath conceived by the Holy Ghost.' The midwife
said, 'Is this trtie?' He answered, ' Come and see.'
And the midwife went along with him and stood in
the cave. Then a bright cloud overshadowed the
cave, And the midwife said, ' This day my soul is mag-
nified, for mine eyes have seen surprising things, and
salvation is brought forth to Israel.' But on a sudden
the cloud became a great light in the cave, so that
their eyes could not beat it. But the light gradually
decreased, until the infant appeared and sucked the
breast of his mother Mary. Then the midwife cried
but and said, 'How glorious a day is this, wherein
mine eyes have seen this extraordinary sight ! ' And
the midwife went out of the cave, and Salome met
her. And the midwife feaid to her, ' Salome, Salome,
I will tell you a Inost surprising thing which I saw.
A virgin hath brought forth, which is a thing contrary
to nature.' To which Salome replied, 'As the Lord
my God liveth, unless I receive •particular {)roof of
this matter I will not belie^f e that a virgin hath brought
forth.' '^
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APOCRYPHAL GaSPELS. 217
The narrative goed on to inform us that Salome enter-
ed the cave^ and proceeded to examine that she might
have demonstration of this wonderful fact, when her
hand was seized with a blazing fire and excruciating
pain ; and it was only by earnest prayer and the inter-
position of a miracle, an angel directing her to take
the child in her arms, that she was rescued.
The Latin Gospel of the Birth of Mary (No. 4) is
similar to the preceding, but has some things peculiar
to itself According to this, as many of the greatest
and most holy persons were bom of mothers before
unfiruitful, such was the case also with Mary. She was
pronused to her mother Anna as a special gift of God,
by an angel, who also predicted her course of life.
In her Uiird year, having been taken by her parents to
the temple, without a leader she walked up the steps
like an adult ; and hereby the Lord indicated her future
destination. During her residence in the temple, she
was daily visited by angels and enjoyed the visions of
God, whereby she was protected from all evil and filled
with all good. In her fourteenth year, by the direc-
tion of the priest, she with her companions were to be
betrothed. They consented, but Mary resisted because
she had vowed perpetual virginity. The priest in
perplexity asked for a divine oracle, and was pointed
to Isaiah xi. 1. In order now to espouse her to some
one, he called together all the unmarried men of the
house of David. They were to appear with their
staves ; and he whose staff should blossom, or upon
which the Spirit of the Lord should rest in the form
of a dove, should be affianced to the virgin and take
her undei* his protection. The decision was in favor
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218 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBI^E.
of Joseph, for a dove came from heaven and seated
itself upon his staff. During her residence in the
house of Joseph, the angel of the annunciation ap-
peared to her and she at once recognized him as a
heavenly messenger, for she had already become famil-
iar with such appearances. The angel promised to her
a son, whom she would conceive and bring into the
worid without sin and with virginity intact. Mary
wished to know how this were possible; and the
angel informed her that it would be without the aid
of man, solely by the Holy Ghost and the power of
the Most High.
The same general features pervade the other History
of the Nativity of Mary (No. 6), though with enlarge-
ments and additions, and still greater extravagances.
According to this, Mary, when three years old, was
like an adult ; her face glistened like the snow, so that
one could scarcely look at it ; she busied herself with
all the labors appropriate to woman, but especially
with prayer, in which she continued from early dawn
till the third hour of the day, and then again from the
ninth hour onward, till there appeared to her the an-
gel of the Lord, from whose hand she received her
food, in order that she might daily grow in the love
of God. Never was virgin more pious, more pure,
more virtuous, more lovely, better instructed in the
wisdom of the divine law ; she was firm, always equa-
ble, immovable, constantly increasing in goodness.
She took care for her companions, that none of them
should fail in word, or laugh aloud, or do anything
wrong. She lived only on angelic food ; the provisions
which she received from the priests in the temple she
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 219
distj-ibuted among the poor. When a sick person
touched her, he returned well to his house. Fre^
quently angels were seen waiting upon her and talk-
ing with her.
In the choice of a husband for her, three thousand
men came together and deposited their staves with the
high priest. Joseph, who was highly esteemed as an
elder, would not take his staff again ; but the high
priest Abiathar called after him with a loud voice, and
when he received his staff, out of the top of it there
came a dove, whiter than snow, and of great beauty,
which flew a long time about the pinnacles of the tem-
ple, and then soared away to heaven. Joseph took
Mary, and also five other virgins to whom the high
priest had assigned work, namely, Rebecca, Sephiphora,
Susanna, Abigail, and Zabel. Mary obtained by lot
the most honorable work, namely, the sewing of pur-
ple for curtains of the temple ; and on this account,
the other virgins called her the queen. On the third
day, while about her usual employment, an angel of
wonderful beauty appeared to her, and made to her
the annunciation, etc., etc.
Contrast all this fanfaronade of childishness, super-
stition and foolery, with the few brief, simple, and
rigidly common-sense notices of Mary, which we find
in the four canonical Gospels. Can any two kinds of
writing be more utterly unlike ?
Christ. We next turn our attention to the account
which these books give of Christ himself Here the
contrast between them and the canonical Gospels
appears, if possible, in still stronger colors. There is
nothing of the Christ whom we find in the New Testa-
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220 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
ment All is puerile, bizarre, extravagant The real
dignity, the steady benevolence, the unvarying good
sense of the New Testament Christ, are wholly un-
known. The periods of life selected, and the topics
treated, are wholly different from, those of the New
Testament
Infancy cmd Childhood of Christ These topics oc-
cur in but two of the canonical Gospels, and are there
treated very briefly ; but they make the great staple
of the apocryphal gospels, and are drawn out to a
most wearisome length. The most minute and char-
acteristic of these narratives is the Arabic Gospel of
tke Childhood of the Redeemer. According to this
book, while the child Jesus was lying in his cradle he
said to his mother, " I, whom thou hast brought forth,
am Jesus, the Son of God, the Logos, as the angel Ga-
briel announced to thee ; and I am sent by my Father
for the salvation of the world." At his birth his pa-
rents are in a cave, amid the splendor of lights which
shine more brightly than the light of the sun. The
woman called in by Joseph, as soon as she saw that
Mary was the mother, exclaimed, " Thou art not like
the daughters of Eve; " to which Mary replied: "As
none among the children is like my child, so his mother
has not her like among women." Mary allows the
nurse to lay her hands on the child, and thus are they
made clean. The child is circumcised in the cave, and
the Hebrew woman preserves the foreskin in a vessel
of spikenard, the same vessel from which afterwards
Mary the sinner anointed the head and feet of the
Lord. To the Magi, who came in consequence of a
prophesy of Zoroaster, Mary gave one of the swad-
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPCLS. 221
dling cloths in which the child had been wrapped, and
they received it as the choicest treasure. On their
return home, they held a festival, and, according to
their custom in religious worship, kindled a fire, and
into it they threw the bandage, which, however, re-
mained unscorched, as if the fire had not touched it.
They kissed it, spread it over their heads and eyes,
and said, ^^ This is an undoubted truth, verily it is a
great thing that the fire can not destroy it" And they
took the bandage, and with gr«at reverence preserved
it in their treasury.
Next comes the narrative of the journey into Egypt,
and a loose, disconnected story of the strangest and
most trivial miracles. The holy family come to a city
which is the abode of the most distinguished god in
the land ; and the moment they take lodgings in a
public house, there is great excitement among the citi-
zens, and they flock to their god to learn the cause.
He replies, "An unknown God has arrived here, and
he is God in truth ; and besides him there is no one
worthy to be worshipped, for he is indeed the Son of
God." In that same hour the idol fell to pieces, and
at his fall came all the inhabitants of Egypt with the
other citizens running together; and a son of the
priest, three years old, who was possessed of many
devils, being seized with his fi-enzy, ran to the public
house, where Mary was washing and drying her child's
linen, one piece of which the demoniac boy caught
down and placed upon his head, when immediately
the devils came out of his mouth and fled away in the
form of rams and snakes.
The holy family, proceeding on their journey, came
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222 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
to a den of robbers ; and the robbers hearing a noise,
and supposing the king to be approaching with an
army, took to flight, leaving behind them their booty
and their prisoners. The prisoners stood up and be-
gan to break off each other's fetters, and were about
to depart with their property, when, seeing the holy
family drawing near them, they asked Joseph what
king it was whose perceived approach had put the rob-
bers to flight. Joseph replied, " He is coming behind
us." In the city to which they came next, there met
them a demoniac woman, who could neither live in a
house nor endure clothing ; but the very sight of Mary
so completely pacified her, that the devil fled from her
in the form of a young man. In another city there
was a nuptial ceremony, but by the influence of Satan
and the magicians, the bride was dumb. She took the
Christ-child in her arms, folded him to her bosom and
kissed him, when immediately the band of her tongue
was loosed. They spent a night in another city, where
was a woman whom Satan, in the form of a serpent,
was accustomed to overpower and embrace ; but she
took the child in her arms and kissed him, and was
thus delivered from Satan's power. This same woman
the next day washed the child Jesus in perfumed
water, which she kept. A girl whose body was white
with leprosy, being sprinkled with the water, became
entirely well. The people said, "Doubtless Joseph
and Mary and their child are gods, for they do not
seem to be mortals." The maiden who was healed,
now attended them, and by the wash-water which had
cured her, she now performed many miracles ; as, for
example, she cured the young son of a prince who
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had been leprous from his birth. They came to an-
other city to spend the night, and put up at the house
of a man recently married, but, in consequence of
some poison in his system, he was unable to consum-
mate his marriage. The presence of the child Jesus
entirely cured him of his infirmity, and he constrained
them to stop the next day and feast with him.
The holy family then met three ladies in distress for
their brother, who by magic had been transformed
into a mule, and they were taking care of him very
tenderly in this form. Mary placed the child on the
mule and said, " 0 my son, by thy great power restore
this mule and make him what he was before, a rational
being ; " whereupon the mule immediately became a
beautiful young man, and afterwards married the
maiden before referred to, who had been dispossessed
of the devil, and was then attending them. The follow-
ing night they came upon an encampment of robbers
under two leaders, Titus and Dumachus. The first by
a gift restrained the other from attacking the holy
family, for which Mary blessed him, and Jesus
said, " Thirty years from now the Jews in Jerusalem
will crucify me and the two robbers with me, Titus on
my right hand and Dumachus on my left ; and on that
day Titus will go before me into paradise." In the
neighborhood of Matarea, Jesus called forth a fount-
ain in which his mother washed his clothes ; and from
the perspiration which there fell from Jesus, there
sprang up an abundance of balsam. They journeyed
to Memphis and visited PharaoL They abode in
Egypt three years, and Jesus wrought many miracles,
which are recorded neither in this Gospel of the Child-
hood, nor in the Evangelio perfecto.
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To the above narrative we add some incidents from
the Latin History of the Nativity of Mary and the In-
fancy of the Saviour (No. 5). According to this,
during the flight to Egjrpt, the holy family rested near
a cave, out of which many dragons suddenly emerged,
whereupon Jesus descended from the lap of his mother,
and placed himself before the monsters, when they
fled, and then turned and worshipped him. Likewise
lions and leopards honored him, and even acted as his
guides. Lions mingled with the oxen and other beasts
of burden whidi they had with them ; wolves associ-
ated with the sheep, and they were all equally peace-
ful and harmless. A tall palm tree, whose fruit was
beyond reach, at the command of the child Jesus,
bowed itself down to Mary and allowed her to pluck
its fruit ; and at a second command it restored itself
to its original position. From the roots of this palm
Jesus caused to flow a spring of the freshest and purest
water. A branch of the same paJm, at the commaad
of Jesus, was carried into paradise by the angels, thei^
to be a sign of victory to the soldiers of the Christian
warfare. When the wanderers were oppressed by
heat, Jesus by his word enabled them in one day to
perform a journey of thirty days. It is also related
here that when Jesus entered a temple, the idols all
tumbled down.
We now return to the Arabic Gospel of the Clnld-
hood (No. 7), which proceeds to give an account of
the return to Bethlehem, and of many miracles wrought
by the water in which Jesus had been washed. This
sprinkled upon a child enabled it to remain unhurt in
a burning oven. A sick child also was healed by
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being put into the bed of Jesus and covered with his
clothes, Mary often distributed his washing-water as
a miraculous tincture, and pieces of his clothing as
amulets against all kinds of harm. A demoniac boy
named Judas, was accustomed in his frenzy to bite at
those who were near him ; and when he was brought
near to Jesus he began to snap and strike at him, but
Satan soon came out of him in the shape of a mad dog.
This was Judas Iscariot, and the same right side on
which he struck at Jesus, the Jews afterwards pierced
with the lance.
Then follow miracles which belong to his later child-
hood, and which are distinguished from the preceding
in this respect, that they are not only performed by
the power which dwelt in Jesus, but with a more defi-
nite consciousness and will of his own. Once, in his
seventh year, he was playing with other boys, and they
were making, with clay, images of oxen, asses, birds,
etc., and while each was endeavoring to excel the
others, the child Jesus said, " The figures which I have
made I will command to walk." He did so; and to
the astonishment of the other children, the clay images
walked off, and returned at his command; he then
made sparrows which flew about, obeyed his word, and
received food at his hand. At another time, Jesus
came into the house of Salem the dyer, and there were
clothes there which were to receive different colors.
All these Jesus threw into one dye-pot, whereupon the
dyer coming in was exceedingly angry; but Jesus
said to him, " I will give to each piece of cloth the
color you desire ; " and taking them out, each was
dyed as the dyer wished. Then the Jews, who saw
this sign and wonder, praised God.
15
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Joseph, in his travels to his work, was accustomed
to take the boy Jesus with him, and when anything
was made too long or too short, too .wide or too nar-
row, (for he was but a bungling carpenter), the child
stretched his hands over it and brought it all right.
Once he had a throne to make for the king in Jerusa-
lem, and worked upon it two years. When it was
finished, he found it too small for the place where it
must be put, and being much cast down about it, the
child Jesus bade him be of good cheer, and each tak-
ing hold of an end of the throne, they pulled upon it
till it came to the right size. The throne was made
of the figured wood which was in use in the time of
Solomon. At another time, the boys who were playing
with him he turned into little goats, and they hopped
about him and honored him as their shepherd. The
women seeing this, cried out, " 0 our Lord Jesus, Son
of Mary, thou art indeed the good shepherd of Israel,
have mercy on thy handmaidens." Then, at the en-
treaty of these women, he restored the boys to their
proper shape. In the month Adar, Jesus collected
the boys together, as their king. With their clothes
they spread for him a seat, they made him a crown of
flowers, placed themselves around him as his guards,
and compelled all who passed by to do him honor.
Then came men bearing on a bier a boy who had been
bitten by a serpent in the woods. They were com-
pelled to come up and do homage to the little king.
Jesus commanded them to take the wounded boy back
to the place where he had received the bite, to force
the snake from his hole and compel him to suck out
the poison, which was promptly done, and immedjg^tely
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the snake* burst asunder. This boy was the Simon
Zelotes afterwards mentioned in the Gospels.
Once as the boys were playing, one fell from a roof
and was killed. The others fled, but Jesus stood by.
The relatives coming up accused Jesus of throwing
the child down, but he ordered the boy to arise and
give testimony, which he did, and affirmed that it was
another who threw him down. Another time Mary
sent him for water, but the pitcher, after he had filled
it, broke in his hands ; so he caught the water in his
apron and brought it to his mother. One sabbath day
he was playing with other boys by a brook, and he
made sparrows which he placed around a little artifi-
cial pool ; but a son of the Jew Hannas, enraged at
this profanation of the Sabbath, ran and destroyed the
pooL Jesus let the sparrows fly, and then said to the
boy, "As the water has disappeared from this pool, so
will thy life disappear ; " and from that moment the
child sickened, and soon after died. One evening as
Jesus was going home with Joseph, a rough, careless
boy ran against him, and he said : " As thou hast over-
thrown me, so shalt thou be overthrown and not rise
again," and immediately the boy fell down and died.
Other revengeful acts of the boy Jesus may be found
in the Gospel of Thomas (No. 2). Joseph at length
gives Jesus to understand that they could no longer
be tolerated among parents whose children had been
slain by his mischievous power, and Jesus answered :
" I know those are not my words, but thine ;. never-
theless for thy sake I will be silent, but those who
have complained of me shall receive their punishment ;"
and the co|nplainers were soon struck blind. Jesus
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228 THB BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
subsequently restored them to sight, but no one after
that dared provoke him to anger.
The Oospel of the Childhood and of Thomas have
many anecdotes of the school-days of Jesus and of his
being taught to read. A school-master in Jerusalem
by the name of Zacheus, offered to teach the child,
and when his parents brought him, the teacher wrote
the alphabet, and told the new scholar to pronounce
first Aleph and then Beth. Jesus said, " Tell me the
meaning of Aleph^ and then I will pronounce Beth^
The master threatened to punish him for his impu-
dence ; but Jesus unfolded the meaning of the letters
Aleph and Beth^ and described their different forms
and positions in a way the master had never heard of
nor read in books ; and then he pronounced the whole
alphabet The master then said, " I believe this boy
was bom before Noah ; " and sent him back to his
parents because he was more learned than all teachers,
and had no need of instruction. It fared worse with
another more able teacher, who on a like occasion
struck the boy Jesus, and at once his hand was with-
ered and he died, so that Mary said, "We will not any
more let him go out of the house, for all who resist
him are punished with death." A third teacher, who
hoped to gain the boy's affections, was so astonished
at his learning and the knowledge of the law which he
manifested to all the by-standers, that he entreated
Joseph to take him away. Jesus smiled and praised
the teagher, and said he had spoken well ; and on his
account he healed the others. When at the age of
twelve he was in the temple at Jerusalem, he asked
questions on the different sciences ; he explained the
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law and the mysteries in the prophetical books, the
depth of which no created mind can sound ; he ex-
plained to an astronomer all the relations and move*
ments of the heavenly bodies, and the rules of astrol-
ogy which are thence derived ; he showed knowledge
of all parts of the human body, the fluids and solids,
the bones, neryes and veins — ^all the fistculties of the
soul and their relation to each other and to the body ;
in short, all kinds of knowledge were entirely familiar
to him ; as the narrative expresses it, the physical and
the metaphysical^ the hyperphyetcal and hypophysical,
so that a learned philosopher present arose and said,
" 0 Lord, from this time onward, I am thy scholar and
thy servant"
From this time Jesus began to withhold the manifes-
tations of his knowledge and his power till his thirtieth
year.
The Deaih of Christ and his Descent to Hades. The
account of these we find in the Greek Gospel of Nica-
demus (No. 3). Pilate commands an officer to bring
Jesus before him, but with gentleness. The officer
spreads a cloth before Jesus for him to walk on. The
Jews complain of this ; and Pilate, asking him why he
had done it, he replied, that he had witnessed the en-
trance of Jesus into Jerusalem, and noticed how he
was honored. Jesus was made to advance without the
cloth, but as he stepped between the soldiers who held
the standards, these eagles themselves bowed down to
do him honor. The Jews, observing this, raised their
voices in anger against the standard-bearers. Pilate
called them before him, and inquired why they had
done this ; and they assured him that they, as pagans.
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knew no reason for honoring Jesus, but the standards
had done it of themselves. Then Pilate leaves it to
the chief of the Jews to make trial for their own satis-
faction, and they select twelve of their strongest and
bravest men, and commit the two standards, each to a
company of six, to hold them before Pilate. They
are threatened with death if they allow the standards
to bow. But when the oflScers bring in Jesus, again
the standards bow and worship him. Now the Jews
complain of Jesus that he is a magician ; that his birth
was attended with infamy ; that he was born in Beth-
lehem, and was the cause of the massacre there ; that his
parents fled to Egypt because they dared not confide in
the people ; that he had profaned the Sabbath, etc. Dur-
ing this strife Pilate asked Jesus, 'What is truth ?" Jesus
answered, " Truth is from heaven." Pilate again ; " Is
there not truth on earth also ? " And Jesus answered,
" Mark how those who have the truth on earth, are
judged by those who have the power on earth."
Then follows the narrative of the crucifixion and
resurrection. After this, Joseph of Arimathea had a
vision of Jesus, who appeared to him in a splendid
light. Joseph sank down and knew not Jesus, but
Jesus raised him up and said, " Fear not, Joseph, see
me, who I am." Joseph cried oiH, '' Rabboni, Eliaa"
He replied, " I am not Elias, but Jesus of Nazareth,
buried by you." For proof Jesus led Joseph to the
tomb in which his body had lain, and showed him the
clothes in which the corpse had been wrapped, and
then led him back to his house, and blessing him sepa-
rated from him. Joseph of Arimathea afterwards
related to Annas and Caiaphas, that Jesus had not risen
from the dead alone, but had called several others to
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life, who had appeared in Jerusalem, among them two
sons of the high priest Simeon, who had taken Jesus
in his arms when he was a child. They were then
living in Arimathea, but were silent as the dead, and
engaged wholly in prayer. Joseph, Nicodemus, An-
nas and Caiaphas went immediately to Arimathea, and
found them prajring, and brought them reverently into
the synagogue at Jerusalem, where, with closed doors,
they adjured them to disclose the particulars of their
resurrection. Charinus and Lenthius (these were their
names), when they heard this, trembled and groaned,
and they looked towards heaven and made the sign
of the cross on their tongues. They then demanded
writing materials, and when these were brought, they
wrote in substance the following narrative :
They were with the fathers in the dark abyss, when
suddenly a golden sunlight entered and shone around
them. Father Adam, the patriarchs and prophets,
arose and announced the arrival of the Deliverer ; and
their father Simeon, who had taken the infant Jesus
in his arms, joined in the announcement. The whole
multitude of the saints rejoiced ; John the Baptist also
stepped up and declared what had happened at the
baptism, and that he had come there before Jesus to
announce his arrival. Then Adam through Seth in-
formed the patriarchs and prophets what he had heard
from the archangel Michael, when in his weakness he
had sent him to the gates of paradise to get for him.
some oil from the tree of mercy. Seth related that
he was then referred to the coming of Christ on earth ;
he should bring to believers the oil of mercy, and
should also lead father Adam into paradise to the tree
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of mercy. Satan now commanded hell to arm againsi
Jesus, who had boasted that he was the Son of God,
though still a man who was afraid of death ; he had
himself tempted him while on earth, and excited
against him his ancient people the Jews. Yet hell
was afraid, for she had felt the power of Jesus, and
could not retain Lazarus against his will. Finally the
Lord of glory arrived in the shape of a man, enlight-
ened the eternal darkness and loosed the perpetual
bonds. Death and hell acknowledged themselves con-
quered, and against their will celebrated the glory of
Jesus. Jesus smote death by his majesty, gave over
Satan to the power of hell, and took Adam with him
into his glory. He called to him all the saints who
bore his image and likeness, he took Adam by the
right hand and blessed him with his righteous descend-
ants. Adam returned thanks, and all with him bowed
the knee to Jesus. Then he marked them with the
sign of the cross, and led them out of hell with Adam
at their head. David uttered a song of praise, so did
Habakkuk, Micah, and the other prophets, all the saints
joining in. The Lord then delivered Adam and the
saints to the archangel Michael, who led them inUy
paradise. Here they were met by two very old men,
who, on being asked who they were, replied that they
were Enoch and Elijah ; they had not yet tasted death,
and were to be kept alive till the coming of Anti-
Christ, with whom they were to fight, and to be slain
by him, and then, after three days and a half, they
would be taken up into the clouds alive. During this
conversation there came along a poor, wretched look-
ing man, bearing on his shoulder the sign of the cross^
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and resembling in appearance a robber. On being
qnestioned he acknowledged that he was the thief
whom the Jews had cracified with Christ, that Jesns
had sent him into paradise, that the angel of paradise
had admitted him on account of the sign of the cross;
and had informed him that Adam with his righteous
and holy sons would soon arrive.
** These are the divine mysteries which we, even I,
Charinus and Lenthius, saw and heard ; more we dare
not tell, according to the commandment of the arch-
angel Michael. But repent, and make acknowledg-
ment and give honor to God, that he may have mercy
upon you."
Charinus gave what he had written to Annas, Caia-
phus and Gamaliel, and Lenthius gave his manuscript
to Nicodemus and Joseph, when suddenly they were
transfigured in glory and were no more seen. The
two writings, on being. compared, were found to cor-
respond exactly, without the difierence of a single
letter.
REKARKS ON THE APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS, AS COMPARED
WITH THE CANONICAL.
The above is a full and faithful narrative of all that
these apocryphal gospels contain ; more full perhaps
than 'some may think necessary or will have patience
to read! But as the idea has been seriously advanced
by Strauss and enlarged upon by others, that these
apocryphal books are of very much the same kind,
and got up in very much the same way as the canoni-
cal, it is time that the friends of evangelical truth fully
understood the matter ; and it can be understood only
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by examination. The books are as yet in but few
hands ; some of them are published only in foreign
and difficult languages, and it is desirable that the ab-
stract, which we give, should be sufficiently full to
make a fair and complete representation of what they
actually contain. Such a representation we claim to
have made, in the preceding pages.
Now let any candid man, with a reasonable share
of common sense, carefully read the narratives above
given, and compare them with our four Gospels, con-
tained in the New Testament, and what will he say to
the allegation of Strauss, and those like him ? Is there
anything to be said, except this, that the clumsiest
counterfeit of a bank note which was ever issued, a
counterfeit so gross that the most juvenile clerk of a
country store can detect it as well as the most expe-
rienced banker, can not be more unlike the genuine
note than these apocryphal gospels are unlike the
canonical ? In the great mass, there are some very
few touches which seem to indicate a tradition above
the ordinary level ; but as a whole, in every aspect of
the case, they present a perfect contrast. So far from
possessing any of the excellencies of the canonical
Gospels, there is not resemblance sufficient to make
them even caricatures. Instead of simplicity, we have
bombast ; instead of strong, good sense, silliness'; in-
stead of purity, filthiness ; instead of manliness, puer-
ility; instead of dignity, meanness; instead of self-
forgetfulness, self-exaltation; instead of generosity,
spitefulness ; instead of elevated, sublime sentiment,
poor, degrading nonsense. Indeed, while the genuine
Gospels are fully equal to and even above the delicacy
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and true refinement and intellectual and moral eleva-
tion of the most cultivated nations and ages, the apoc-
ryphal generally fall below almost the lowest, and
could scarcely find anywhere a public, mean enough
to receive and relish them, except in the dark corners
of the declining Roman empire, where they first orig-
inated, or the equally dark comers of the modem pa-
pacy and Mormonism.
Moreover, if the genuine Gospels were of the same
character as the aprocryphal, how could the philo-
sophic historian, from such a beginning, account for the
development of such an institution as the Christian
church ?
The Christian church exists ; Hegel himself could
not deny that, nor reason the fact into non-existence.
The Christian church has existed for a long time ; it
has had a history, it has exerted influence, it has had
a character ; and here are results to be accounted for,
events which have had a cause ; and is the cause to
be sought in such stuff as these apocryphal gospels are
made of? Are these results to be accounted for by
ascribing them to such persons as are described in
these books, or such minds as produced these writings ?
With even more reason might you attribute the plan-
ning and rearing of such edifices as Westminster abbey
and St. Paul's church, and the new parliament house,
to such characters as Mr. Pickwick and Mr. Jingle, the
Artful Dodger and Fagin the Jew. There is reason
in all things that are really things ; and that which
has no reason in it, is nothing (an Unding)^ and neither
deserves nor needs an answer.
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COMPARISON OP THE CANONICAL GOSPELS WITH THE FRAG-
MENTS OF GOSPELS SUPPOSED TO BE LOST.
Besides these apocryphal gospels, which a mere in-
spection and comparison with the genuine show to be
worthless and of comparatively late origin, there are
preserved in ancient writers the names and certain pas-
sages of others, which seem nearer the apostolic period
and more worthy of notice. That there were written
memorials of our Saviour's ministry anterior to some of
our canonical Gospels, is plain from the declaration of
Luke in the prologue to his Gospel ; and that these
memorials were imperfect and unsatisfactory is equally
evident from the same authority. To be fully satisfied
on this head one need only carefully read the verses
referred to, Luke i. 1-4.
It is not probable that Luke had here in mind Mat-
thew and Mark, for two could not with propriety be
called many (noUor); and had he referred to these
divinely authorized historians, he could hardly have
assigned it as his reason for writing, that Theophilus
might . know the certainty (da^dietai') of the things
wherein he had been instructed ; for as far as the cer-
tainty is concerned, it could be as well ascertained
from Matthew or Mark as from Luke. Luke, when he
wrote, might not have known that Matthew and Mark
had written before him ; and it would seem from his
introductory remarks, that Theophilus, his friend, had
not yet found access to any written account of Christ,
except such imperfect and fragmentary notices as had
been penned by diflferent men without divine authority.
That such notices should have been written is in itself
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in the highest degree probable ; and existing as they
must only in mannscript and in private hands, it is
also certain that after the authentic Gospels were pub-
lished, they would generally cease to be transcribed
and would finally perish. Yet portions of them would
probably remain extant for a considerable period ; in
certain places and by some persons, they would most
likely be preferred to the true Gospels ; and combined,
augmented, and variously fashioned, they might hold
their position several generations, before they would
finally perish.
The earlier Christian writers, as Justin Martyr, Ire-
naeus, Clement of Alexandria and Tertullian, make
allusions and even quotations, which seem to establish
the fact of the existence of such narratives in their
time; and when we come down to the time of
Origen and Jerome, we find gospels mentioned by
name which differ both from the canonical and the
apocryphal as we now have them. In the first homily
on Luke, published with the works of Origen and
ascribed to that author, there is the following state^
ment; "Many undertook to write gospels, but all
were not received •.,.«, so that you may know
that not four gospels only but many were written,
* * The church has four gos-
pels, the heretics many ; one of which is inscribed
according to the EgypUana^ another, according to the
twelve apostles I know a certain gospel which
is called according to Thomas^ and according to Mat
ihiasy The last two of these may properly be called
apocryphal, but the first two seem not with strict justice
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238 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
to come under that designation, inasmuch as it seems
probable that the first was mainly an Egyptian edition
of the Gospel of Mark, and the second nearly identical
with the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew. In his preface
to Matthew Jerome says: "There were many who
wrote gospels, .... which, being edited by diflfer-
ent authors, became the sources of diverse heresies, as
that according to the Egyptiana^ and Thomas^ and Bar-
tholomew^ and also the twelve apoetles.^^ In his work
Be Vir. lllust (c. 2), he makes mention of a " gospel
which is called according to the Hebrews^ which was
lately translated by me into both the Greek and Latin
languages.'' Eusebius, speaking of the Ebionites (Hist.
Ecc. iii. 29), says : '' They use only the gospel which is
according to the Hebrews,^^
Of those writings, which may be supposed to have
some connection with the " many " alluded to by Luke,
we will present a translation of some fragments still
preserved from that according to the Hebrews^ from the
one according to the Egyptians^ and the memorabilia
(di7tof»vrjfmpe6(iara) quotcd by Justiu Martyr. We shall
add a brief notice of the Diatessaron of Tatian and of
the gospel of Marcion, which last, being for substance
an abridged edition of Luke, has been learnedly and
laboriously restored and edited by Aug. Hahn, and
published entire by Thilo in his Godex Apoc. Nov. Te^
I 401-486.
QOSPEL ACCORDING TO THE HEBREW&
Neither this gospel itself, nor Jerome's translation
of it, have for many centuries been seen ; and all the
knowledge which we can now obtain of its contents,
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 239
must be derived from incidental quotations, like those
which we herewith translate.
Clemens Alex, (L. ii. Strom, p. 380) : " In the gos-
pel according to the Hebrews, it is written. He that
JuxOi admired shall reign ; arid he ihat hath reigned shall
have resV^
Origen (in Johan. vol. iv. p. 63) : " But if any one
will go to the gospel according to the Hebrews, where
the Saviour himself saith : Now my mother^ the Holy
Ghost J took me by one of my hairs^ and brought me to
the great mountain even Tabor ^
In Matth. xix. 19 (vol. iii p. 691): "It is written
in a certain gospel, which is called according to the
Hebrews (if yet it may please any one to take it, not
as authority, but as an illustration of the question pro-
posed), and it says : One of the rich men said to him.
Master, doing what good thing shall I live ? He said
to him, Man, fulfill the law and the prophets. He
replied to him, I have done it He said to him. Go,
sell all which thou possessest, and divide among the
poor, and come, follow me. But the rich man began
to scratch his head, and it did not please him. And
the Lord said to him, How canst thou say I have ful-
filled the law and the prophets, when it is written in the
law, thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself; and be-
hold many of thy brethren, the sons of Abraham, are
covered with filth, dying with famine, and thy house
is filled with many good things, and nothing almost
goes out of it to them ? And turning to Simon his
disciple, who sat by him, he said, Simon, son of John,
it is easier that a camel go through the eye of a needle,
than a rich man go into the kingdom of heaven.''
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Fpiphamm (Rei^res, xxx. 13) : " In the gospel with
them (the Ebionites) called according to Matthew, yet
not entire and pure, but adulterated they
call it the Hebrew (gospel) ... it is contained thus :
There was a certain man, Jeeus by name, and he was
about thirty years old, who chose us. And going into
Capernaum he went into the house of Simon, who is
called Peter, and opening his mouth he said : Passing
along by the sea of Tiberias, I chose John and James,
the sons of Zebedee, and Simon and Andrew and Simon
Zelotes, and Judas Iscadot ; and thee, 0 Matthew, sifc
ting at the receipt of custom, I called and thou didst
follow me. Wherefore I will that ye be twelve apos-
tles for a testimony unto Israel. And John was bap-
tizing, and the Pharisees went out to him and were
baptized, and all Jerusalem. And John had raiment
of cameVs hair, find a leathern girdle about his loin&
And his food, it says, was wild honey, whose taste was
that of manna, as honey-cakes with oil ; and thence
they may change the word of truth to a lie, and in*
stead of locusts (d«^r) they may make it cakes (iy'^^s)
with honey. But the beginning of the gospel with
them is this : It came to pass in the days of Herod, the
king of Judea, John came baptizing the baptism of
repentance in the river Jordan, who was said to be of
the race of Aaron the priest, the son of Zachariah and
Elizabeth; and all came to him. And after saying
many things, it goes on, The people being baptized,
Jesus also came and was baptized. And when he went
up from the water, the heavens were opened, and he
saw the Holy Spirit of God in the form of a dove de-
scending and coming to him. And there was a voice
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from heaven saying, Thou art my beloved Son, in thee
I am well pleased. And again, I this day have begot-
ten thee. And immediately a great light illumined
the place. Which seeing, it says, John said unto him,
Who art thou, Lord? And again there was a voice
from heaven to him, This is my beloved Son, in whom
fam well pleased And then it says, John falling
down before him, says, I pray thee, 0 Lord, baptize
thou me. But he forbade him, saying, Suflfer it, for
thus it is becoming that all things be fulfilled."
XXX. 14 : " Cutting oflF the genealogies in Matthew,
they begin : To make the beginning, as I said before,
saying. It came to pass, it says, in the days of Herod
king of Judea, in the high priesthood of Caiaphas, a
certain man, John by name, came baptizing the bap-
tism of repentance in the river Jordan, ^nd so on."
XXX 16: "That which is called .the gospel with
them, contains this : I have come to destroy the sacri-
fices, and if ye will not cease to sacrifice, wrath will
not cease from you."
Jerome (Contra Pel. iii. 2) : "In the gospel accord-
ing to the Hebrews the history narrates. Behold the
mother of the Lord and his brethren said to him, John
Baptist is baptizing for the remission of sins ; let us go
and be baptized by him. But he said to them, What
have I sinned that I should go and be baptized by /
him?"
Comm. in Isa. xL 1 : "According to the gospel which
the Nazaraeans read, the fount of every Holy Spirit
shall be upon him. Moreover we find these things
written : And it came to pass when the Lord ascended
from the water, the fount of every Holy Spirit de-
16
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scended and rested upon him and said to him, My Son
in all the prophets I was expecting thee, that thou
shouldst come, and I should rest upon thee. For.thou
art my rest, thou art my first bom Son, who shalt reign
forever."
Comm. in Mich. vii. 6 : "In which (gospel accord-
ing to the Hebrews) it is said in the person of the
Saviour, My Mother, the Holy Spirit, took me lately
by one of my hairs."
Comm. in Ephes. v. 3 : *'Also in the Hebrew gospel
we read, that the Lord, speaking to the disciples, said,
You may never rejoice except when you see your
brother in charity."
De Vir. 111. c. 2 : "The gospel according to the He-
brews, after the resurrection of the Saviour, reports :
But the Lord when he had given the linen cloth to a
servant of the priest, went to James and appeared to him.
For James had sworn that he would not eat bread from
that hour in which he had drank the cup of the Lord,
until he had seen him arise from them that sleep. And
again, a little after, the Lord said. Bring a table and
bread. And immediately it adds. He took the bread
and blessed and break and gave to James the just,
and said to him, My brother, eat thy bread, for the Son
of Man has risen from them that sleep."
Con. Pel. iii. 2 : "And in the same volume (Gos-
pel of the Hebrews), he says. If thy brother sin against
thee in word, and make satisfaction to thee seven times
in a day, receive him. Simon, his disciple, said to
him. Seven times in a day ? The Lord answered and
said unto him, Yes, I say unto thee, until seventy times
seven! For even in the prophets, after they are
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 243
anointed with the Holy Ghost, is found matter of
sm."
Comm. in Matt, vl 11 : "In the (Hebrew) gospel, the
man who had the withered hand, is said to be a brick-
layer (ctzementaritis)^ and he prayed for help in this
manner : I was a brick-layer, earning my living by my
hands ; I pray thee, 0 Jesus, that thou wouldst restore
health to me, that I may not basely beg my bread."
Ep. 120, ad Hedib. : "In the (Hebrew) gospel we
read, not that the veil of the temple was rent, but that
the lintel of the temple, of wonderful magnitude, was
broken down."
From the above extracts, it is manifest that the Gos-
pel according to the Hebrews was vastly superior to the
latter apocryphal gospels, of which an abstract has
already been given ; and greatly inferior to the canoni-
cal Gospels of our New Testament. The ground- work
of it would seem to have been the Hebrew Gospel of
Matthew, in some places mutilated, and in others en-
larged by augmentations from a tradition not then
remote. There were probably several different recen-
sions of it ; and it seems to have been substantially the
same with that which was sometimes called the gospel
acccording to the twelve apostles,
THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO THE EGYPTIANS.
Epiphanius^ in speaking of the Sabellians, has the
following passage (Hae[r. L. xxii. 2): *' Their whole
error, and the power of their error, they derive from
certain apocryphal books, especially from one called
the Egyptian Gospel^ to which some giv« this name.
For in it are contained many such things, as it were
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244 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
mysteriously in a jumble, from the person of the
Saviour, as that he declared to his disciples that he
was the Father, and he the Son, and he the Holy
Ghost."
Clemens Alex. (Strom, iii. 6, etc., p. 445, 52, 53) :
" To Salome, inquiring how long death should have
power, the Lord said. As long as you women bear chil-
dren Moreover, she saying, I have done
well in not bearing children, the Lord answered, say-
ing, Eat every herb, but that which is bitter thou
mayest not eat ; by which words he signifies, that celib-
acy or marriage is a matter within our own choice,
neither being enforced by any prohibition of the other.
This, I suppose, is contained in the gospel according to
the Egyptians^
Clemens Romanus. In the second epistle, ascribed
to this author (vi. 12), there are two quotations from
a certain gospel, which, when compared with what is
said of the Egyptian gospel by Clemens Alexandrinus,
learned men have inferred to be from that work. The
first is as follows : " For the Lord saith, ye shall be as
lambs in the midst of wolves. Peter answered and said.
What if the wolves shall tear the lambs in pieces?
Jesus said unto Peter, Let not the lambs, after they
are dead, be afraid of the wolves. And ye also, fear
not them that kill you, and are then able to do noth-
ing to you ; but fear him who hath power, after that
ye are dead, to cast both soul and body into hell-fire.''
The second passage is this : " Wherefore also he saith
thus : Keep the flesh pure and the soul unspotted, that
ye may receive eternal life."
The above is nearly all that remains of the gospd
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 245
according to the Egyptians; and it is not absolutely
certain that all even of these passages are from that
work, for Clemens Alexandrinus only supposes, and
the source of the quotations of Romanus is wholly
conjectural So far as we are able to judge, this Egyp-
tian gospel was still more faulty than that of the He-
brewa
Besides these, there are mentioned by ancient writers
a gospd of Peter (Theodoret Haeret. Fab. ii 2), and a
gospel of Cerinthus (Epiphan. xxviL 6 ; xxx. 14) ; but
no extracts are given from them, and from what is
said about them, it would seem that the latter was
closely connected with the gospel of the Hebrews, and
the former with that of the Egyptians. According to
this, the gospel of Cerinthus would have some connec-
tion with our canonical Matthew, and the gospel of
Pefer with our canonical Mark. (Guericke, Einleit. N. T.
198, 199.)
MEHORABnJA OF JUSTIN MARTYR.
This father in his writings frequently refers to the
deeds and words of Christ, and cites passages from
certain apostolic writings, which he calls memorabilia
or memoirs and also gospels. These writings he affirms
were the work of apostles and of companions of apos-
tles. Two passages from his second Apology may be
sufficient to illustrate the manner in which he refers to
these authorities. For the apostles, in the memoirs com-
posed by them, which are called gospels, have thus handed
down, etc. For in the memoirs which I say were compos-
ed by the apostles or by those who accompanied them, etc.
Some of the passages which Justin quotes, are literal
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246 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
transcripts from our canonical Matthew; many are
quotations, with slight verbal diflferences, from Mat-
thew and Luke ; some combine the sense of passages
found in two or more of the Gospels; and others
merely give the meaning of a text without attempting
to give the words. There are still others which differ
very much from our present Gospels, and some few,
of which no trace can be found in our canon. Of the
two kinds last mentioned we will give a full selection,
and specimens of the others.
By comparing all the quotations, it would seem that
Justin used mainly our Matthew, and was quite familiar
with Luke ; while he makes very little direct use of
Mark, and still less of John. He seems also to h/ive
had traditionary reports of some passages in the life
of Christ not contained in our Gospels, and access to
some writings not now extant, as perhaps the original
Hebrew Gospel of Matthew, and some of the " many "
referred to by Luke in the introduction to his Gospel.
All this is very easily accounted for by the fact that
Justin was a native and resident of Palestine, where
these traditions and the writings from which he draws,
originated and were longest preserved ; while, of the
two Gospels which he passes over almost without no-
tice, the one (Mark) was written and published for the
use of the Latins, the other (John) was originally de-
signed for the Greeks of Asia Minor.
We begin our extracts with the sentences which
differ most widely from our canonical gospels.
Dial. c. Tryph. : " And then the child, having been
born in Bethlehem, since Joseph had not in that village
a place to lodge, was lodged in a certain cave near the
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village. They being there Mary brought forth the
Christ, and laid him in a manger ((f^^yfi) where the
Magi, coming from Arabia, found hint"
'^ Then Jesus came to the river Jordan, where John
was baptizing, and when he went down to the water,
a fire was kindled in the Jordan ; and while he was
ascending from the water, his apostles write, the Holy
Ghost like a dove flew upon him .... and at the
same time a voice came out of the heavens, TIiou art
my 8on^ I this day have begotten thee^
(Jesus) " being among men, did carpenter's work,
making ploughs, and yokes, by these things even
teaching the symbols of righteousness and an indus-
trious life."
" And they, seeing these things take place, said it
was a magical fantasy, for they dared to call him a
magician and a deceiver of the people."
" Christ said. In what things I apprehend you, in
those also I shall judge you,"
The matters in the above statements, to which there
is nothing corresponding in our canonical Gospels, are
evidently traditionary notices ; and some of them very
closely resemble what the fathers quote from the gos-
pel according to the Hebrewa
We proceed to give extracts, of which the sense is
found in the canonical Gospels, though not always in
one passage nor in the same words,
ApoL ii. : "Be not anxious as to what ye shall eat,
or wherewith ye shall be clothed. Are ye not better
than birds and beasts ? yet God feedeth them. Be
not anxious, ^then, as to what ye shall eat or wherewith
ye shall be clothed; for your heavenly father knoweth
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248 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
that ye have need of these things ; but seek ye the
kingdom of heaven, and all these things shall be added
unto you ; for where the treasure is, there is also the
mind of the man."
" Many will say to me, Lord, Lord, have we not eaten
and drank in thy name, and wrought miracles? and
then I will say to them, Depart froin me ye workers
of iniquity. There shall be weeping and gnashing of
teeth, when the righteous shall shine like the sun, and
the wicked shall be sent into eternal fire. For many
shall come in my name, being clothed outwardly with
the skins of sheep, but inwardly are ravening wolves.
By their works ye shall know them. Every tree not
bearing good fruit, is hewn down and cast into the
fire."
" Be not afraid of those who destroy you, and after
that are not able to do anything ; but fear him who
after death, is able to cast both soul and body into
heU."
These extracts all have the appearance of being
quoted from memory out of different parts of the
canonical Matthew and Luke, without reference to the
particular place, or any attempt at verbal accuracy.
Apol. ii. : " Whosoever is angry, shall be obnoxious
to the fire."
" For whosoever heareth me and doeth what I say,
heareth him that sent me."
" Woe to you, scribes and pharisees, hypocrites ; for
ye tithe seasoning and rue ; but consider not the love
of God and the judgment."
'' Many false Christs and false apostles shall arise,
and shall lead astray many of the faithfuL"
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 249
'" For Christ also said, Except ye be bom again, ye
can not enter into the kingdom of heaven. But it is
plain to all, that it is impossible for those who have
once been born, to enter again into the womb of those
that bear them."
Dial. c. Tryph. : " A certain one saying to him Good
Master, he answered, Why callest thou me good ? there
is one good, my Father who is in heaven."
These are the quotations by Justin which differ most
widely from the text of our canon. He quotes
often, generally without any variation in sense,
and frequently with literal exactness. Very many
verses of the New Testament are found complete in
his writings. It is evident, on comparison of the
whole, that his memorabilia or memoirs were the same
Gospels which we now have, with perhaps the edition
of a Hebrew Matthew ; and when he gives what is not
in our Gospels, he copies from the traditions of his own
times, either oral or written, or both.
DIATESSAKON OP TATIAN.
Tatian is described by Eusebius (Hist. Ecc. iv. 29)
as once a hearer of Justin Martyr, in good repute among
Christians ; but after the death of Justin, he became
an ascetic Encratite, abstaining from flesh and wine,
and denying the lawftilness of marriage. He wrote
against the gentiles a book which Eusebius commends,
the object of which was to prove the superior anti-
quity of Moses and the prophets to the sages of Greece
and Rome. He also wrote the Diateasaron (M xsaaa^bw'^^
an abridgement and harmony of the four Gospels; and
of this Eusebius speaks disparagingly.
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250 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Theodoret (Haer. Fab. i. 20) informs us that Tatian
cut off the genealogies of Jesus and the account of
his birth ; and Bar-Salibi, an oriental writer (Asseman.
Bibl. Or. i. 57), says his Diatessaron began with the
first words of John's Gospel/^i' ^zn ^y 6 Uyog
Epiphanius (Haer. xlvi. 1) says, that some called his
rb dtdL X6<ra6tq(av etayyihow the gospcl according to the He-
brews.
This, I believe, is all the reliable information we
have respecting this work of Tatian, which some mod-
em critics, as Eichhom and Schmidt, would have to
be a biography of Jesus, independent of our canon.
There is not the least evidence of any such thing, but
of the exact reverse. The most probable supposition
is, that it was a harmony of our four canonical Gos-
pels, somewhat mutilated and modified to suit his
Encratite views, and based mainly on the Hebrew
Matthew ; as Tatian, it seems, was taught Christianity
in Palestine, and by Justin Martyr. In any event,
certainly, nothing can be made out of it to the dispar-
agement of our canonical Gospels.
GOSPEL OF MARCION.
Marcion, an anti- Judaizing Gnostic, according to the
uncontradicted testimony of antiquity, published for
his followers a gospel, which was simply the Gospel
of Luke, mutilated and changed to suit his own views.
This is the testimony of both Tertullian and Epipha-
nius (adv. Marc. iv. 2, 6; Haer. xlii. 11). Some of
the important parts omitted are cap. i., ii. and iii. 1-9,
29-35; XV. 11-32; xix. 29-46; xx. 9-18, 3T, 38;
xxii 35-38, 42-44 Guericke, Einleit. N. T. 206.
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APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS. 251
The beginning of Marcion's gospel, according to the
edition of Hahn, is as follows: "In the fifteenth
year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, God came down
to Capernaum, a city of Galilee, and was teaching on
the Sabbath days. And they were astonished at his
doctrine, for his word was with power. And there
was in the synagogue a man, having a spirit of an un-
clean devil, and he cried out with a loud voice, say-
ing : " and so on, word for word, according to Luke
iii 1 ; iv. 31-33, etc. In accordance with the above
representation of the first appearance of Christ in Gal-
ilee, an ancient writer informs us that "Marcionites
frequently affirm, that the good God suddenly appeared
and came down immediately from heaven into the
sjmagogue." (Pseudo-Orig. Dial p. 823 ; Thilo, Codex
Apoc. N. T. i. 403.)
The extract given above may be considered a fair
specimen of the book, and of the manner in which it
compares with the canonical Luke. It is perfectly
plain from the testimony of the ancients, and from an
inspection of the work itself, that it is in no sense a
rival of our canonical Gospels, nor derived from any
sources independent of them.
Of the other early, gospels, sometimes alluded to,
that of Bartholomew, according to the testimony of
Eusebius (Hist. Ecc. v. 10) and Jerome (De Vir. 111.
c. 36), was nothing else than the Hebrew Gospel of
Matthew. Of those ascribed to Matthias and Thomas,
no authentic trace remains; and there is not the
shadow of evidence that either of these apostles ever
wrote a gospel. Those ascribed to Apelles and Basi-
lides were nothing more than extracts from the canon-
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252 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
ical Gospels, variously mutilated and interpolated.
None of these, certainly, are fit to hold any rivalship
with our four which are contained in the New Testa-
ment.
Arabia has been prolific in the apocryphal literature
of the New Testament ; several of the apocryphal gos-
pels have been preserved to us through the Arabic
language ; and Mohammed was much indebted to this
source for his materials in the construction of the Ko-
ran. Chapters iii. and xix. of that strange book are
well worthy the perusal of every Christian; for they
contain a minute account of the families of Christ and
John, and all the wonderful circumstances attending
their birth, in the true Arabic fashion.
In drawing up the preceding account of the gospel
fragments of the early age, we have been largely in-
debted to De Wette's learned and vigorous Introduc-
tion to the New Testament The German unbelief
can not now be successfully encountered without the
help of the German learning. The antidote is scarcely
to be found except where the poison growa The
climes which yield the most noxious plants, are the
very climes which produce the most effective medi-
cines, the sweetest fruits, the most luxuriant vegeta-
tion.
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CHAPTER EIGHTH.
THE MODERN SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL HISTORY OP
THE NEW TESTAMENT.
THE VALUE OP THE POUR GOSPELS, AS WE NOW HAVE THEM
IN THE NEW TESTAMENT.
To every man who feels the need of religion, and
can not surrender his reason to the tyrannical and pre-
posterous claims of the papacy, the four Gospels, as we
now have them in the New Testament, are of priceless
value. The human soul, in its wants and sorrows and
conscious weakness, in view of its brief existence on
earth, and the dread unknown which awaits it beyond
the grave, is greatly in want of some objective truth to
rest upon ; and without it the only wise philosophy is
that which says, Let vs eat and drinh^ for to-morrow
we die. If the four Gospels be received as objectively
true ; if Jesus Christ, as therein described, be an ac-
tually existing personage, and our ever-living, ever-
present friend and guide, then we have what we need ;
then the soul can rest and rejoice ; then the spiritual
can gain a permanent victory over the physical ; our
life on earth can be made a time of usefulness and
peace, and our death a season of triumph and joy.
Moreover, having Jesus and the Gospels objectively
true, on their authority we have also the other writings
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of the New Testament, and the historians, the poets,
and the prophets of the Old ; and now, with an nn-
mutilated, unimpeachable Bible in our hands, we, like
our fathers, can march through the world with heads
erect, and a joyous courage, bidding defiance to Satan,
and sorrow, and wicked men.
But weaken our confidence in the Gospels ; let them
be regarded as a jumble of traditions, partly true and
partly false, then the chief effect of the Christian reli-
gion is, to raise our hopes only to sink us the deeper
in despair; to increase our fears, without showing us
definitely our danger, or teaching us how to escape it ;
our life on earth is equally unfitted for sensual pleasure
and for spiritual enjoyment ; and beyond the grave we
have only just light enough to make the darkness visi-
ble. With the mere mockery of a revelation which is
then left us, there are but two classes of men who can
be satisfied with life as it now exists — ^namely, those
whose desires and aspirations never go beyond the
physical comforts of the external world, and the proud,
cold, self-sufficient thinkers, whose chief pleasure it is
to despise the weaknesses of their fellow creatures, and
think themselves above them.
Entertaining such views, I confess I never can read,
or listen to a critique on the sacred writings, and espe-
cially on the Gospels, without deep feeling. If indiffer-
ence as to the result, be an essential qualification for a
good investigator of the Scriptures, then I must give
up all hope of ever being one. To the result I can not
be indifferent if I would, for there are all my hopes.
Who would be expected to be indifferent, if the object
of the investigation on which he is obliged to enter,
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SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL HIST. 255
were to ascertain whether his father were a cheat, or
his son a thief, or his wife false ?
" But we must have a zeal for science ; we must let
truth work its way ; we must be willing that e very-
falsehood, and every mistake, however long and lov-
ingly cherished, should be torn from our embrace."
Very true, so we must ; but does a proper regard for
science, a proper love of truth, a proper hatred of
error, require the sacrifice of every humanizing and
ennobling feeling ? Is man, or is he required to be,
all intellect and no heart? To honor the mind, must
we crucify the soul ? Is he the only anatomist who
can lay bare to his knife the body of a beloved sister,
with the same indifference with which he would hack
upon the carcass of an unknown culprit just snatched
from its dishonored grave ? I believe no such thing ;
and while Christ is to me more than father or mother,
more than wife or child, or my own life even, I do not
believe that sound philosophy requires me to see that
holy Gospel, which contains all that I know of him,
treated by an irreverent critic, as the greedy swine
would treat a beautiful field of growing corn. Nor
do I believe that an irreverent, ungodly critic is the
man to do justice to the Gospels, or tell the truth about
them fairly, in any sense. He may investigate their
language, and examine their history, and give correctly
the results of his verbal criticisms ; but the real sub-
stance of the Gospels is far above, out of his sight ;
he can have no sympathy with Christ ; he can have
no conception of the motives which influenced the
apostles ; he can have no idea of the feelings which
animated the sacred writers; he is a total stranger to
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the whole soul of that which he criticises. When a
man who has never seen, can accurately describe col-
ors, or one who has never had the sense of hearing,
can give a good account of sounds, or a horse with
iron-shod hoofs can play tunes on a church organ, then
I will not refuse to believe that an ungodly critic can
write a reliable book on the New Testament. It is
only the very lowest part of the work, that such a
critic can perform ; and when he comes to the higher
criticism, the interior life of the word, he is wholly out
of his sphere. How can a man with no poetry in his
soul, review a poem? How can a man with no math-
ematics, properly estimate a treatise on fluxions ? How
can one destitute of the first principles of taste, be a
critic in the fine arts? And how can a man wholly
irreligious, be a fit judge of the most religious of all
books ? Let the Gospels be estimated according to
their real worth, and the writers upon them according
to their real worth, and then justice will be done on
both sides. We will refuse no help, and we will repel
no truth, though it come from the most ungodly ; but
we will not idolize intellect which has no heart, nor
allow profane hands to filch from us our choicest
treasures.
There is a decided tendency, in our times, to award
peculiar consideration and deference to profane writers
on sacred subjects. If an author with the spirit and
principles and talent of Voltaire, were to write a life
of Christ, or a commentary on the Gospels, or espe-
cially an introduction to the Old Testament, it would
be just in accordance with the spirit of the age to
study and quote such works with more profound
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respect than is awarded to the writings of Luther, or
Calvin, or Bengel, or any other writer who loves and
venerates the Word of God. This whok tendency is
most particularlj to be despised or deplored
RELIGIOUS CHARACTER OF THE HEGELIAN PHELOSOPHT.
The recent assaults on the Gospels have proceeded
ahnost entirely from the Hegelian school of philoso-
phy. The influence t)f this philosophy extends far
beyond the circle of its professed disciples. It is
found where the very name of Hegel is almost un-
known, and where not a syllable of his writings has
ever been read. It invades Christian and even ortho-
dox pulpits, and sometimes neutralkes the power of the
Gospel under the most evangelical forms. It is a proud
and a godless philosophy ; and, like a cholera miasma
in the atmosphere, often deals desolation and death
where its very existence is unsuspected. Though the
most abstruse of all speculations, it never exists as a
mere speculation, but immediately proceeds to action
— and its first acts are the annihilation of human re-
sponsibility, and of the spiritual world, and of God
himself While in some cases it retains the words and
phrases of the most evangelical fisdth, it expels from
them all their meaning, and leaves them the mere
hieroglyphs of an atheistic mystery. There is a uni-
verse but no God — ^there is development but not crea-
tion.
In thus describing the religious character of this
philosophy, I am fax from intending a personal attack
on its great founder. In many of the qualities which
make up a man, he was among the noblest of men, —
17
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a fine physical organization, a prodigious intellect, and
a generous heart ; and he would probably himself be
one of the first to protest against the atheistic extremes
of some of his followers. Nor are his disciples ail
alike. There is the extreme rights the central^ an J the
extreme left — or, as I would characterize them, the
reUgioua^ the non-religtoua^ and the anti-religious. On
the extreme right was Marheinecke, a clear-headed and
sound-hearted Christian theologian and preacher, one
of the best historians and one of the most accurate
reasoners ; and how he could be a Hegelian and the
author of such works as his History of the Reforma-
tion and his Christian Symholik was always a mystery
to me. There, too, is Goeschel, a truly pious and em-
inent jurist ; but inasmuch as he could find in Goethe
an apostle of Christianity, and in the Faust a high de-
velopment of the Christian spirit, it is not so surprising
that he can see in Hegel the Christian philosopher.
Domer, too, one of the best of men, one of the most
learned, conscientious and reliable of writers, the au-
thor of that most admirable work, the Development-
history of the Doctrine respecting the Person of Christy
is said to be a Hegelian of this class.
The assaults on the Gospels have proceeded from the
extreme Uft^ represented by such men as the younger
Feuerbach, and Strauss and Bruno Bauer, F. C. Baur,
Renan, Schenkel, etc. This, I suppose, is the legiti-
mate result of the Hegelian philosophy, and these men,
whatever Hegel himself might think of them, I regard
as his true foUowera
But what is the Hegelian philosophy ? I have been
admonished more than once to treat this philosophy
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with respect, to admire it at least as an ^'exquisite
work of art if not a system of absolute truth." I shall
do my best in this particular. I have acknowledged
before, and here repeat the acknowledgment, that I
have no very definite knowledge of it. It stands be-
fore me, in its bulk and its unintelligibleness, as a huge,
shapeless, threatening spectre, most fitly described in
the words of Virgil :
Monatrum horrendum^ informe, ingeiu, eui lumen ademptum*
(A monster, horrid, hideous, huge and blind.)
*
But when I think of the tremendous influence it
exerts, and the mighty mischief it is making, it assumes,
to me, (in the language of Milton,)
^ The other shape.
If shape it may be called, which shape has none
Distinguishable in member, joint, or limb ;
Or substance may be called that shadow seems.
For each seems either ; black it stands as night.
Fierce as ten furies, terrible as hell.
And shakes a dreadful dart ; and what seems its head
The likeness of a kingly crown has on."
We speak here of the Hegelian philosophy only in
its connection with religion, and as it now exists.
Whatever of obscurity may rest over some of its spec-
ulations, its principal bearings on religion are perfectly
intelligible, and are carried out to their extreme con-
sequences with a cool audacity that is almost frightful.
According to Hegelianism, the mbjjective is not only
more than the objective^ but the subjective is the whole,
it is the entire substance, and the objective has no ex-
istence except as the shadow or reflection or creation
of the mbjective. The great discovery boasted by He-
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gel and his followers, the great first principle of all
truth, the honor of whose development Schelling in
Tain attempted to dispute with Hegel, is the absolute
identity of avhject and object^ that is, I suppose, the
thing perceiving and the thing perceived are one and
the same thing.
Admitting this as a fundamental principle, what is
God ? Is God the creator of man, or is man the crea-
tor of God? The latter of course. The human mind
is the only development of God, — only by the work-
ings of the human soul does God arrive at self-con-
sciousness ; and if there were no men there would be
no God, as there can be no color without an eye, and
no sound without an ear. There seems to be recog-
nized a sort of natura naturans, a sort of blind, uncon-
scious, fermenting leaven, constantly working ; but
this never attains to personality or consciousness except
in the human soul.
We will not ourselves undertake to make the state-
ment^ of the doctrines of this sect — ^we will take them
just as they are made by one of the most able and
active of the living advocates of the system, in his
work entitled Das Wesendes Ghristenthuma. This is a
favorite book among the Germans of our own country,
and can be obtained in any quantities at our principal
German bookstores. A brief, but very satisfactory,
notice of it has been given in the Christian Examiner
published in Boston, No. clxi.
Says this writer, " The absolute Being, the God of
man, is man's own being." *' Since God is but our
own being, the power of any object over us, is the
might of our own being. In willing, loving, feeling,
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etc., there is no influence but of ourselves over our-
selves." "All limiting of the reason rests on error."
"Every being is all-sufi&cient to itself." "It is delu-
sion to suppose the nature of man a limited nature."
" Religion is the consciousness of the infinite ; it is
and can be nothing but man's consciousness of his own
infinite being." " If you think infinity, or feel infinity,
it is the infinity of thought and feeling, nothing else.
The knowledge of God is the knowledge of our-
selves ; for the religious object is within us," " God is
man's revealed inner nature — his pronounced self
Religion is the solemn unveiling of the concealed
treasures of humanity, the disclosure of its secret
thoughts, the confession of its dearest secreta The
Christian religion is the relation of man to his own
being as to another being." "Religion is the dream
of the human souL"
This is not caricature, nor ridicule, nor misrepresent
tation. It is just a plain statement of some of the
prominent doctrines of the system, by one of its most
able advocates. There is no God ; and the devout
man, when he thinks he is worshippng God, is simply
worshipping himself. There is no accountability;
there is no individual immortality ; when a man dies,
his soul is re-absorbed into the great mass of being, by
the natura nattiran» to be again, perhaps, in time de-
veloped, and so on from eternity to eternity. These
principles are boldly and openly avowed, and find able
and popular advocates both in Germany and in this
country. One of the most eminent of the German
republicans. Dr. Voight of Giessen, during the sum-
mer of 1848, declared publicly in the Frankfort par-
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liament, that there could be no permanent freedom,
till the idea of God and all responsibility to God were
entirely banished from the human mind No wonder
that the German revolution, with such men to lead it,
proved a miserable failure. No wonder that the pious,
intelligent, sober men of Europe, viewed the whole
movement with distrust, and finally abandoned it alto-
gether. Atheistic liberty is the worst kind of tyr-
anny. An editorial article in a political newspaper
published in Cincinnati, says, " Religion is the cause
of all the oppression which exists ; inasmuch as it ca-
joles poor sufferers with the chimerical idea of a heaven
hereafter ; and the source of religion is want of educa-
tion, ignorance. This is the origin of all evil." The
same principles, with a little more regard to religious
public sentiment, and partially disguised under a garb
of specious phraseology, are zealously propagated in
New England, and infect large numbers especially of
our educated young men. Before they begin to feel
the need of religion, the foundation of religious faith
is taken away. For this work of ruin, the genius of
Hegelianism has peculiar facilities. It can approach
unperceived, and accomplish its purpose before its
presence is suspected. It can use the language of any
theology, even the most orthodox, and convey its own
ideas in the words of an evangelical faith, and here is
our danger now.
One of the phrases already quoted from Feuerbach,
may serve as an example of the deceptive manner in
which language may be used. It is this, "God is
man's inner nature, his pronounced self" Here it may
be alleged, is the New Testament doctrine of the Lo-
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gos, the God-man, God revealed ; and in like manner
"we may get the Holy Ghost, as that may be consid-
ered to be the inner nature of man re-acting upon itself,
and this may be caUed that spiritual influence which
good men crave and pray for. Thus can the Hegelian
atheist, with most conscientious deceptiveness, use all
the language of the Trinitarian Christian.
With this philosophy, testimony is nothing, objective
narrative is nothing, history is not to be learned from
external sources, it must be developed from within —
fiwjts must not be sought for, they must be made ; and
on this principle these philosophers act with great con-
sistency and vigor, as we shall see when we come to ex-
amine their theories of the Gospel history. Another of
the principles of this philosophy is eminently a practical
one, namely, that " man is God, and must worship him-
self" This the Hegelians do with the most enthusiastic
devotion. Such self- worship was never before witnessed
on earth. The enormous self conceit of these men,
, the self-conceit of Hegel himself, the pitiful folly of
his admirers who pronounced their eulogies over his
grave, are among the greatest monstrosities which ever
existed on this planet of monsters, comparable to
nothing but the lizards larger than ten whales, and the
frogs bigger than elephants, which are said to have
existed on the pre-Adamite earth. Self-conceit is a
symptom of the disease. The venerated Neander, in
a letter to Prof Schaff of Mercersburg, justly charac-
terizes the system as " the philosophy of a one-sided
logic, of intellectual fanaticism, and of self-deification^
My respected friend, Prof S. himself, I am happy to
see, takes no exceptions to this view of the subject.
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Indeed, lie himself calls this kind of Hegelianism, an
*' arrogant pantheism, diflFerent from atheism only in
form" — "a lifeless formalism of the understanding,
that destroys at last all soul in man, and turns him into
a pure speculator on the open heath, an unfruitftil
thinker of thiAking, a heartless critic and fault-finder."
(Schaffs Kirchenfreund for Jan., 1851, also Mercers-
burg Review, vol. iii. p. 81, ffi)
There is no disinterestedness in this philosophy, there
is no veneration, there is no love. Each being is all-
sufficient to itself, and each revolves around itself as its
own centre, and each is at the same time both planet and
sun, both axis and orbit. And what can come of such
kind of principles, but selfishness, and animalism, and
every evil work ?
Now, it is such philosophers as these, who presume
to sit in judgment on the New Testament, to estimate
the characters therein portrayed, to determine as to
what is, and what is not, fitting in a revelation from
God to man ; to decide with solemn majesty a priori^
from internal marks only, out of the depth of their
own consciousness, and with nothing else to aid them,
as to what is spurious, and what is genuine, in th^
sacred writings ! How well they succeed, we shall see
as we go on. And we will only say here, that if op-
posites are the best judges of opposites, if goats are
the best judges of perfumes, if worms have suitable
qualifications to decide on the merits of eagles, theu
are these men qualified to sit in judgment on Jesus,
and the apostles, and the writers of the Gospels. Yet
their writings are published, translated into different
languages, and extensively read. In various ways
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they exert a great influence even over those who never
read them ; the echoes of their voice reverberate from
many a newspaper and popular periodical ; their sound
is heard in many a lyceum, and mechanics' institute,
and mercantile association, and debating club; they
indate the vanity, and heighten the self-conceit, and
set loose the passions of many a young man in our
histitntions of learning, and in our mercantile and man-
nfactnring establishments, and produce extensively a
roinons infection in the whole intellectual atmosphere
— not sparing even the theological school, the minis-
terial study, or the Christian pulpit.
So many ingenious ways do poor short-lived men de-
vise, and such infinite pains do they take, to rid them-
selves of God their heavenly Father, of Christ their gra-
cioiis and only Saviour. It is often and justly remarked
of rogues and freebooters, that they employ far more
ingenuity, and energy, and perseverance, to get a liv-
ing by dishonesty, than would be necessary to make
them securely and reputably wealthy in an honorable
calling; yet, they are always poor, and in constant
dread of detection and punishment. So these proud
thinkers tax their minds and hearts more severely to
be irreligious, than would be necessary to secure an
eminent place in the Christian walk ; while they can
look only for the w(xges of stn^ which is death ; while
^ gifi 9f ^^d^ and that only, t> life and peace. Ac-
cording to the Scripture, it is the fool who hath satd in
hia Hearty there is no God; and the same Scripture
says, The fool ia wiser in his own conceit^ than seven
men that can render a reason; and, though you bray a
fool in a mortar with a pestle among wheats yet will not
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Iii8 folly depart from him.. How wonderfully descrip-
tive of the foolishness of Hegelian pantheistic atheism !
ANALYSIS AND CHARACTERISTICS OF THE PRINCPAL HEGE-
LIAN ASSAULTS ON THE GOSPELS.
The four Gospels exist, they have for ages existed
in all the languages of the civilized world, they have
produced the most astonishing revolutions, they lie at
the foundation of all modem civilization ; they did not
arise in a remote antiquity nor in a fabulous era, but in
the zenith of the Roman empire and in immediate con-
tact with the Grecian culture. The problem of the
philosophic sceptic is to account for all this, on any
other supposition than that of the historical truth of
the Gospel narrative and the reality of miraculous in-
terposition. The first regular, systematic, Hegelian
attempt towards the solution of this great problem was
made in 1836 by David Frederic Strauss, then a young
man just commencing his career as a teacher in the
university of Tuebingen. I was in Germany at the
time when Strauss's Life of Jesus first appeared, and
it was exciting as great a commotion among the learned
of Germany then, as a few years after the prophesying
of the millenarian Miller excited, mong the unlearned
in America. That was the year fixed on by Bengel
for the end of the world ; and many who had no faith
in Bengel or the apostle John, yet devoutly believing
in Strauss, thought surely the end of Christianity had
come. Prof. Tholuck told me he considered it the
most formidable attack the New Testament had ever
sustained, and he was right heartily at work in answer-
ing it, and soon after published his excellent book on
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the Credibility of the Gospel History. The answers
to Strauss were numerous, almost numberless, the con-
troversy raged with great vigor for some six or eight
years ; but now Strauss, before he is an old man, finds
himself an obsolete and antiquated writer ; as much
BO as was, when he began, the old Paulus whom he
treated so cavalierly. But though Strauss is already
intellectually dead and buried, never to rise again,
among the Germans, he just begins to live among
those who use the English language, and translations
of his book are read with the most innocent wonder-
ment by many of our young men, who have no know-
ledge of the fact that it has long since been thoroughly
exposed and exploded in the land of its birth. In the
track of Strauss^ with more or less of divergency, fol-
lowed Weisse, Gfroerer, Bruno Bauer, WUke, Schweit-
zer, Schwegler, Leutzelberger, F. C. Baur, Renan, Schen-
kel, and many, many others ; the greater part of whom
remain unto this present^ though, as to any influence,
they have already mostly /aZZen asleep.
In analyzing some of the principal Hegelian hypoth-
eses of the Gospel history, as specimens of the whole,
we shall avail ourselves liberally of the labors of
Ebrard, who in hi& admirable work, entitled Wiaaen-
schafdiche Kritik der evangelischen OeacMchte^ has with
great industry, skill and fairness, epitomized, arranged,
and made them intelligible.
(1) HYPOTHESIS OF STRAUSS.
(a) The facts out of which the Gospel narratives
have arisen. These according to Strauss, were very
few, and mainly the following: The Jewish nation,
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during the reigns of Augustus and Tiberias, had the
expectation of a national Messiah, predicted in the Old
Testament, who would be a political deliverer and
work miracles greater than Moses wrought. At this
period there was a Jew bom at Nazareth in Galilee
named Jeschuah, (the sceptic sometimes gains consid-
erably by simply changing the orthography of a well-
known name) ; and another Jew, by the name of John,
became a celebrated ascetic preacher and baptizer.
Jeschuah attached himself to John as one of his disciples;
and after the imprisonment of the latter, prosecuted
the same work, and gathered disciples of his own.
Jeschuah now formed the design of effecting by his
doctrine the moral regeneration of his countrymen ;
and being under the influence of the supernatural
prejudices of his times, imagined that God would in-
terpose to help him in so worthy an attempt, and to
re-establish the kingdom of David. This idea corres-
ponded very nearly to the Messianic expectations of
the Jews ; and they, hearing him preach from time to
time, began to think whether he might not be the ex-
pected Messiah. At first, Jeschuah shrunk from such
a thought, but gradually became reconciled to it, and
at length it gained full possession of his mind. He
was however, entirely destitute of the means of carry-
ing out this idea in practice, for he had no political
influence nor any power of working miracles. He saw
that the all-powerful priest party was daily becoming
more and more incensed against him ; the unhappy
fate of the persecuted prophets of the Old Testament
dwelt on his mind ; some texts of the Old Testament,
as he began to think, indicated a suffering and dying
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Messiah ; and, on the whole, he at length anticipated
a violent death from the hands of his enemies. His
anticipations were realized, and h^ perished on the
cross in early life.
This, according to Stranss, is the whole of the his-
torical basis of the Gospels. There were no miracles
wrought, nor even pretended to be wrought, during
the lifetime of Jesus ; nor did he, at the commence-
ment of his career, imagine himself to be the Messiah,
nor anticipate the sad fate wliich at length overtook
1dm.
(b) Origin of the miramloua stories of the Gospels.
The disciples of Jeschuah believed him to be the Mes- | /-
siah ; and when the first shock of his terrible end and '
of their own bitter disappointment was past, they set
themselves to devise some method of reconciling actual
facts with their cherished expectations, and especially
to see if they could not in some way get the idea of
suffering and death into their notion of the Messiah.
They searched the Old Testament, and found many
passages which represented men of God as plagued,
persecuted and slain ; and these answered to them for
Messianic predictiona The Messiah, then, though de-
parted, was not lost ; he had only gone into his glory ;
he must still love and care for his own. This idea
I took such complete possession of their minds, that
\ some of the women began to imagine they had actu-
•aUy seen him after his burial, and they so said to the
men — and the whole company became so excited and
talked about the matter so much, and got their imag-
inations so inflamed, tliat two or three times, when
they were gathered together, some object dimly seen
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(
in the mountain mist, or some unknown person ap-
proaching them, gave them the impression that they
had actually seen the Lord in bodily presence.
The great miracle of the resurrection, being thus
generated and bom and brought into the world, be-
comes the fruitful parent of other miracles. Accord-
ing to the expectation of the Jews, the Messiah must
work miracles, and if Jeschuah wrought no miracles,
how could he be the Messiah ? The matter was anx-
iously thought of, and the remembered words and
deeds of Jeschuah were scrutinized to see if they
might contain any germs out of -which miraculous nar-
ratives could naturally grow. He had told them they
should be fishers of men — ^happy reminiscence ! what
more natural than that out of this should grow the story
of the miraculous draught of fishes ? He had said the
unfruitful* tree should be cut down ; and here we have
the nucleus of the fig-tree which was cursed and with-
ered away. True, the apostles could not themselves
imagine that they had with their own eyes seen these
miracles ; but knowing as they did, that the Messiah
must work miracles, they could not doubt that such
miracles actually occurred. At least, if this was not
the idea of the apostles, it must have occurred to
those who had seen but little of Christ while he was
on earth, and it became the popular belief of most of
the Christian congregations.
The miracles being thus set on growing by Strauss,
their increase is very rapid, and many a scion from the
Old Testament tree is grafted into the New, and imme-
diately bears fruit. fThe hand of Moses, the face of
Miriam, the body oiNaaman, had been leprous, and
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were cured at a word; and the Messiah of course
could heal leprosy as well as Moses and Elijah, and
therefore he did. As Jordan occasioned miraculous
cures in the Old Testament, so Siloam in the New ;
as Elijah struck men with blindness in the Old Testa-
ment, so Christ cured blind men in the New ; as Jero-
boam's withered hand was restored in the Old Testa-
ment, so Christ healed withered hands in the New ;
as Moses divided the Red Sea, so Christ stilled th6
(ralilean Sea; as Moses turned water into blood, so
Christ turned water into wine — and so all the miracles
of the Old Testament find parallels in the New ; and
this accounts for very many of the miraculous narra-
tives of the New Testament! But Strauss does not
so clearly tell us how to account for these miracles of
the Old Testament. On his principles, however, it is
very easy to invent methods, and any invention is pre-
ferable to the plain, simple, matter-of-fact truth.
As with the doings of Christ, so with his sayings ;
those which stand recorded are compositions, ampli-
fications, from brief hints of his remembered apo-
thegms.
Now we have the materials of the Gospel story, and
after a while, one and another writer works up these
materials into a written narrative of which we have
four still extant, ascribed severally to Matthew and
Mark, to Luke and John.
(c) Estimate of this hypothesis. Such is the hy-
pothesis of Strauss ; and this sort of stuflF forms the
staple of two thick, heavy volumes (three in the En-
glish translation), written with great energy, clearness
and show of learning, apparently in the most sober
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earnest, and giving evidence of untiring industry.
And these volumes have set the world on fire, aad in
the opinion of many have demolished the very foimda-
tions of Christianity, and left the worid without a
Saviour, and almost without a God. What a mon-
strosity; in every view of it a monstrosity! The
church of Christ is an accomplished fact, a most migh-
ty, efficient, working fact — ^a fact which confessedly
began at the time iJleged — and does the hypotheas
of Strauss give us means in the least degree adequate
to account for this fact ? The African who imagines
that when the moon is in an eclipse, there is a great
serpent attempting to swallow her, and the child who
supposes that when it thunders, God is riding in a big
wagon over a tin bridge, are philosophers of the high-
est order in comparison with Strauss as he exhibits
himself in his Lehen Jeau.
What an inexplicable enigma is that Jeschuah, for
whose existence we are indebted solely to the imagin-
ation of Strauss. What unheard of, unaccountable
compounds of knavery and goodness, of silliness and
greatness, are Strauss's disciples of Jeschuah ! What
wonderful proficients in stupidity must have been the
men of that generation, and the generation immedi-
ately succeeding ! How could myths arise and gain
credence, in the manner and to the extent which he
dreams of, in the same generation and the same country
wherein the facts are alleged to have occurred ? This
difficulty is felt by Strauss, and he attempts to get rid
of it by supposing that the stories originated mostly
in those parts of Palestine east of the Jordan, where
Christ had personally seldom appeared The whole
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of Palestine has scarcely one quarter the extent of the
State of Maine ; and can men in Maine lie with impunity,
by going east of the Penobscot ? That was an active, en-
lightened, revolutionizing, realistic age. The whole
world was in motion, nations intermingled with each
other, languages were cultivated-— commerce, literature,
the arts, military operations, kept everything a-stir, and
there was neither sluggishness, nor stagnation, nor
mental stupor to favor the growth of a new mythology.
One might as well look for the growth of mushrooms
at midday on the pavement of the Royal Exchange in
London, under the tread of the thousands of feet
which daily there perambulate, as expect the prosper-
ous development of such myths as Strauss dreams of,
in such an age and country as that which witnessed
the lives and deeds of Christ and his disciples.
Again, how does Strauss know that matters came
about in the way which he represents? Who told
him ? or was he there to see ? What authority does
he bring, that we should postpone to this single state-
ment the testimony of prophets and apostles and mar-
tyrs ? Ah ! he knows it by the Hegelian power of in-
tuition— ^by means of which history is constructed
subjectively, instead of being objectively learned
from the proper sources. In such constructive his-
tory, or rather theories of history, we have no confi-
dence.
Yet there is in Strauss's book not a little of learn-
ing, and a great amount of acuteness and ingenuity.
He starts many difficulties in the Gospel narrative,
which it requires a clear head and a steady hand and a
thorough acquaintance with the subject, effectually to
18
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obviate. His book has exerted a great and pernicious
influence in Europe, and is doing the same in this
country. By means of English translations he is in
the hands of many young men who are greedily read-
ing him without any sufficient knowledge of the sub-
ject to detect the groundlessness of his assumptions
or the fallaciousness of his reasonings ; and without
dreaming that he has already been thoroughly refuted
and antiquated in his own country. In the German
bookstores the critical toritings of Strauss and the
theological writings of Tom Paine stand on the same
shelf, and are apparently held in equal honor. Why
should it not be so with us? In what respect is
Strauss so much better than Paine, that he should be
respected while Paine is despised ? If he has more
learning and more decency than Paine, he certainly
has much less of sound, practical common sense. And
we are sorry to be obliged to add, that much of what
De Wette has said about the Old Testament (made
current among us by Theodore Parker's transiatioDs)
is very little better than what Strauss says about the
New. Since the blazing celebrity of Renan has thrown
its glare over the world, Strauss has entirely re-written
his life of Jesus, but with no essential improvement.
(2) HYPOTHESIS OF WEISSB.
Chr. Herm. Weisse is an older man than Strauss, a
philosopher of no mean pretensions, and a metaphysi-
cian. He had published a work on the Fundamental
Principles of Metaphysics^ another on the Idea of Ood^
a System of Aesthetics^ etc. ; and in 1838, awakened
by the celebrity of Strauss, he published a book enti-
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tied the Cfoepel ffutory critically and philosopMcalhj
investigated (bearbeitet, belabored). Weisse understands
animal magnetism, and all the mysteries of clairvoy-
ance.
(a) The facta out of which the Gospel narratives
have arisen. There lived in Palestine during the reign
of Tiberias a good man, one Jesus of Nazareth, who
among other happy gifts, possessed the magnetic power
of healing. He was in fact a full charged galvanic
battery, ready at any touch to be discharged. He
went about Galilee preaching, collecting disciples, and
applying his magnetic power to the healing of diseases
and the quieting of demoniacs ; so that he very natu-
rally gained the affections of the Galileans, who recog-
nized in him the Messiah, and would have been glad
to make him king. Biit, though he felt his Messiah-
ship, he had no political ambition, and sought rather
the moral elevation of the people ; and in prosecution
of this purpose he uttered many parables. Thus he
represented the blessed effects of his ministry under
the image of the opening of the heavens and the de-
scent of a dove ; the strong faith which men should
exercise in the grace of G^d, by the parable of a Ca-
naanitish woman seeking help of a Jew, and taking
no denial ; the judgment which is to come upon men
spiritually unfruitful, by the image of a barren fig-tree
cursed and withered ; the regeneration of the world
by his word he compares to turning water into wine,
etc.. He once occasioned great excitement by awak-
ening a maiden who had fallen into a swoon and was
• supposed to be dead. He never went to Jerusalem
but once, and that was at the feast of the passover,
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when he was immediately apprehended and crucified.
We have no reason to believe that he prayed aloud
ihe night before his apprehension ; or that he said
when they were nailing him to the cross, Father^ far-
give them^ for they know not what they do. During his
crucifixion there was an accidental obscurity of the
heavens which made much talk. He was buried, and
his body remained in the tomb ; but his nervo-magnetic
spirit once appeared to his disciples and passed up into
the clouds.
(b) Origin of the miraculous stories. These all
i came very naturally. After the death of Jesus his
1 parables were turned into stories, and men thought
they were actual occurrences. (How many times has
this happened in respect to ^sop's fables!) These
stories were not propagated by the apostles; they
busied themselves only with teaching the doctrines of
their Master, and said nothing about his biography.
But somebody told the stories and found people to
believe them ; and other stories were made from very
trivial circumstances. From what he once casually
said, that he whose feet are washed is every tohit clean,
arose the story of his having washed his disciples'
feet ; the apostles practised baptism, and after a while
began to think (Weisse does not tell us why) that Je-
sus had instituted such a rite. Once, after Jesus'
death, when the apostles were at supper together, they
w became greatly excited with the idea of prosecuting
? the work which he had left unfinished ; and this gave
rise to the story that Christ himself had instituted the
Lord's Supper; and also to the tradition, so much
like the theophanies of Homer, of his supping with
the two disciples at Emmaus after his crucifixion.
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(c) Origin of the written OoepeU. According to
the testimony of Papias, (says Weisse,) the apostle
Matthew wrote in the Hebrew of that time, a collec-
tion of the discourses of Jesus. According to the
same authority, Mark, a scholar of Peter, wrote a biog-
raphy of Jesus, as he had heard Peter relate it ; and
afterwards this narrative of Mark was combined with
Matthew's collection of discourses, (now translated
into Greek,) and this compilation is our present Greek
Gospel of Matthew. Meanwhile, Luke, the companion
of Paul, had written another biography from inde-
pendent sources. Here we have the first three Gos-
pel& As to the fourth Gospel, ascribed to John, it
was not originally intended for a biography at all ; but
the apostle John, when he was a very old man, con-
tinually pondering over his ideal of the life of Christ,
(now growing very dim and shadowy,) that he might
not lose entirely this image out of his mind, wrote
down fragmentary notices, as they happened to occur
to him, without any view to publication, and not even
intending any real objective biography, but merely for
the purpose of defining and fixing his own subjective
ideal. But, after the good apostle's death, some un-
lucky elders found these fragments in his study, and im-
agining they were written as an actual memoir of Jesus,
arranged them for publication, and gave them to the
world, with such modifications, additions, and connect-
ing sentences, as the exigencies of the case seemed to
require. Thus we have our present Gospel of John.
(d) Estimate of this hypothesis. The reader must
understand that Weisse does not even pretend to
have any testimony ns to the facts being as he states
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them. He would think it unworthy of a philosopher
like him to come at a historical result in that way. It
is but a specimen of the developing of history from
internal consciousness, instead of learning it from ex-
ternal evidence. To illustrate the safety and accuracy
of this method of developing historical facts, let us try
it in reference to some book of American biography.
Marshall's Life of Washington, as we now have it, was
not written by Judge Marshall, except detached por-
tions of it, nor has the book been seen in the United
States, till within a few months past. The origin of
the work was this : During the nullification excitement
of 1827, Hon. John Holmes of Maine amused himself
by writing notes across the Senate Chamber, to Hon.
T. H. Benton of Missouri. Mr. Benton preserved these
notes, thinking he might sometime have occasion for
them, and he added some of his own. At the session
of Congress during Mr. Clay's compromise eflforts, Mr.
B., perceiving that his time had come, committed these
papers to Hon. Amos Kendall, who, out of them and
Judge Marshall's papers, forged the book called Mar-
shall's Life of Washington. In consequence of this
publication. Col. Benton was elected president of the
United States, and Gen. Cass, amid much noise and
confusion^ migrated to California ! This, if not exactly
like the Hegelian hypotheses of Scripture history, is
just as good and just as true as the most of them.
(3) HYPOTHESIS OF GFROERER.
Aug. Gfroerer is a countryman of Strauss, and a wri-
ter of reputation. His church history especially (pub-
lished in 1841-45) is spoken of by competent judges
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as a work of great merit He began (aa he says) to
meditate Ids theories earlier than Strauss^ but thej are
no better, and if possible, in some respects even worse.
The Gospel of John he considers genuine, but the
other three, spurious and mythical ' A few miracles,
such as the healing of the nobleman's son and the sick
man of Bethesda, he. admits, and does not sympathize
with Strauss in his rejection of all miraculous narratives.
The three synoptical Gospels (Matthew, Mark and
Luke), according to him, owe their origin to the influ-
ence of the writings of Philo and other Jews ; and
many ideas ia them are derived directly from the Tal-
mud, the Fourth Book of Esdras, the Book of Enoch,
and other apocryphal writings. (The thing counter-
feited owes its existence to the counterfeit.) He is at
much pains to prove the antiquity of these apocryphal
and Talmudic writings, to make them, if possible, seem
older than the Gospels, but with very indifferent suc-
cess. Even granting him the antiquity he claims, the
resemblances on which here lies for the support of his
theory are marvelously unlike, as if one should derive
the wigs of the English bishops and judges, from the
head-dress of the Feejee islanders.
To cite a few examples : According to w**e Jerusalem
Talmud, one day when Rabbi Eliezer and Kabbi Jona-
than were riding together, the former began to dis-
course, when the latter hastily dismounted from hia
ass, and said : " It is not reasonable that I should bear
the honor of my Creator, and thereby ride on an ass."
They both sat down under a tree, and there fell fire
from heaven and surrounded them (as a reward of
their humility). From this and other similw passages,
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Gfroerer concludes that in the time of Christ the Jews
held fire to be a necessary accompaniment of revela-
tions from Grod. Hence arose the tradition that John
Baptist had declared that Jesus should baptize with
fire ! In the same Talmud it is related that Deuteron-
omy came to God and said : " 0 Lord, thou hast writ-
ten down thy law in me ; " and then complained that
Solomon, when he took to himself many wives, took
away the^W or y out of the word nahym^ Deut. xvil
17. Then God answered Deuteronomy and said : "Sol-
omon and a thousand like him shall perish ; but not a
vowel shall perish from thee." Hence arose the tra-
dition that Jesus had said, that not one jot or one tittle
of the law should fail. The Targum of Jonathan, in
Zech. xiv. 21, translates the word Canaanite by mer-
chant'^ hence the tradition that Christ drove the
money-changers out of the temple! These deriva-
tions certainly exceed Knickerbocker's etymology of
the word raango from the name Jeremiah King ; for in
this case the steps are quite obvious, thus : Jeremiah
King^ Jerry King^ Jerhin^ Cucumber^ Mango,
The doctrine of the Trinity, Gfroerer thinks is of
Rabbinic origin. The text, Zech. xiv. 4, the predicted
disruption of the Mount of Olives, is explained of the
Messiah and his sister the Holy Ghost, who are both,
according to the Rabbins, ninety-six miles high and
twenty-four miles wide. Hence comes the whole Chris-
tian doctrine of the Trinity ! 0, Gfroerer, thou art
beside thyself j much learning hath made thee mad,
Ebrard, in the first edition of his work, with great
significancy certainly, if not with scrupulous delicacy,
illustrates the probability of Gfroerer's hypothesis of
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the origin of the Gospels, by the following figure : A
company of 'leprous beggars wash themselves in a
river, and from this river a beautiful young man is seen
to emerge ; the inference is certain that this young
man was made from the impurities which the beggars
had washed off. And what in this case is the more
i:emarkable, the young man came to the shore before
the beggars had been in the water at all !
(4) HYPOTHESIS OF BRUNO BAUER,
Bruno Bauer is a younger man than Strauss, and he
may well be regarded as the extreme extremity of the
extreme left wing of Hegelianism. In him self-deifi-
cation and the annihilation of all objective truth have
reached their culminating point. No subtilty or re-
finement or locomotive force of Hegelianism can ever
go beyond Bruno Bauer. His thoughts are so misty,
and his expressions so bombastic and overstrained,
that it is exceedingly diflScult to get his meaning, and
still more difficult to give a translation of it in another
language ; for like very tenuous gasses, it all seems to
evaporate as soon as it meets the air. It is, however,
sufficiently plain that Bruno has a very high opinion
of himself, a very low opinion of all theologians, and
of God no opinion at all. At the very outset he anni-
hilates all historical truth. There was indeed a Jesus,
and there was a community in the Jewish nation which
formed the nucleus of the Christian church ; and this
is nearly the whole of the historical basis which he is
disposed to acknowledge. There were no Messianic
prophecies or expectations among the Jews, there was
no baptism of Jesus, there were no discourses, no mir-
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acles, not anything to give an objective foundation to
the historical narratives in the Gospels. These narra-
tives are not records of facts which once actually oc-
curred ; but they are the spontaneous efflorescence of
the innermost religious consciousness of the age. The
writers did not even profess to themselves to record
&cts, nor did they pretend to make other people think
they were recording fSsu^ts. How it is that men could
write long narratives without thinking they were facts
and without intending to write fiction, Bauer himself
explains in a way of his own. We will translate his
language as well as we are able, and leave the reader
to guess his meaning. Says Bauer : " The religious
spirit is that disruption of the self-consciousness, in
which the essential definiteness of the same steps over
against the consciousness as a power separate from it
Before this power the self-consciousness must naturally
lose itself; for it has therein cast out its own contentar
out of itself, and so far as it can still sustain itself as a
Me for itself, it feels itself before that power as nothing,
so as it must regard the same as the nothing of its own
self Nevertheless the Me as self-consciousness can-
not entirely lose itself — ^in its subjective, secular
thought filled with moral ends and its willing, it still
maintains its freedom ; and into this freedom also the
religious consciousness and the historical development
of the same are involuntarily drawn. Both the reli-
gious consciousness and free self consciousness thus
come into contact, to interpenetration, without which
the first could be neither individually living nor capa-
ble of a historical growth. But so as this livingness
and growth, after their first contact, become the sub-
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ject of religious reflection, they are again torn from
the self-conscionsness, they step before the conscious-
ness as the deed of another, and now also, necessarily,,
the interposition which had placed them in the self-
consciousness as its own movement, becomes a ma-
chinery whose bands are guided in another world."
(Krttik der evang. OeachichU der Synoptiker^ L 25 f.)
Such is his explanation of this wonderful phenomenon,
and doubtless it is to himself very profound and satis-
fectory.
These principles being settled, the origin of the first
three Gospels, according to Bruno, was as follows:
Somebody wrote the book which bears the name of
Mark, and others very strangely mistook it for a verit-
able biography of Jesus. Another afterwards took
this book in hand, and without thinking it was not his-
torical, changed and modified it according to his own
ideas, and thus we have the Gospel of Luke. Now
comes a third, and compares these two writings to-
gether, seeks to reconcile the contradictions he finds,
compiles and combines, reading first a verse in one
and then a verse in the other. In this writer's reflec-
tion, subjectivity predominates ; yet he, as well as his
predecessors, is all unaware, that what he writes is
simply the product of his own imagination, and not
real, objective history. Here we have the Gospel of
Matthew.
This Bruno is very confident, and feels great con-
tempt for theologians. He says: "See how they
(the theologians) stand there; how the theological
hate glows from their eyes. Ha ! would you grasp
the thunder ? Miserable mortals ! well that it was not
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given to you ! " '' Now, after the above exploitations^
ask them whether they really think their Jesuitism
can hold on ; whether they believe that their decep-
tion and lying will endure forever ? When the time
comes that their falsehood must be a conscious and de-
termined lie, then their judgment is no longer &r off."
HYPOTHESIS OP BENAN.
The Vie de Jesus (Life of Jesus) by Ernest Bienan^
published in Paris some two years since, has become
well known. It differs from the German works to
which we have been attending as a Frenchman gener-
ally differs from a German. It is lively and popular
in style but pre-eminently superficial and untrustwor-
thy. It is not nearly so much a biography of Jesus as
Daniel Defoe's History of the Devil is a biography of
Satan.
Before expressing my own opinion of the work of
Renan, I will give an estimate of it by a learned Prus-
sian Jew, Dr. Philippson of Magdeburg. Dr. Philippson
as a Jewish Rabbi is as much averse to admitting the his-
torical credibility of the Gospels as Renan himself, but
his solid Teutonic erudition is repelled and disgusted by
the flippant shallowness of the Frenchman. He says :
" The author who after Strauss has gained the greatest
renown in literature of this kind is the Frenchman
Ernest Renan (Vie de Jesus, cinquieme edition, Paris,
1863), but for our subject he is of no value. Renan
is no critic; he is merely a rationalist."
'* With the aid of lively colors, or psychological rai-
sonnements^ he, as a master of his language, produces
a very readable biography. It was natural, therefore.
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that his work found many readers, especially in France,
and was met with violent refutation on the part of the
clergy ; but it could gain no great importance in the
domain of science and historical criticism, for after all,
much of the work rests upon arbitrary assumptions —
very little upon critical principles and an examination
corresponding with them."
" He often contradicts himself most glaringly, even
now and then on the same page of his book."
" Meeting with such a confusion of ideas and such
a misconception of all history, we may dispense with
all further examination. We said so much lest we
should be charged with an omission."*
A very brief exposition of the style of thought and
the general tone of Kenan's celebrated work, will, I
think, satisfy every intelligent reader that the truly
learned Jewish Rabbi whom we have just quoted, has
given a fair and accurate estimate of his real merits as
a writer on the Gospels.
In making out the following analysis we avail our-
selves of an able article in the London Reader.
HiB Family and Native Place. He came from the
ranks of the people. His father Joseph, and his mother
Mary, were persons of middling condition, belonging
to the class of artizans living by their labor, in that
state, common in the East, which is neither one of easy
circumstances nor of misery. . . . If we set aside
something of the sordid and the repulsive which Islam-
ism everywhere carries with it, the town of Nazareth,
in the time of Jesus, did not differ much, perhaps, from
*Dr. Philippson on the '^Crucifixion and the Jews," translated from
the AUgemeine Zeitung des JttdenthumSf hj M. Majer.
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what it is at present. The streets where he played as a
child, we see them still in those stony paths or those
small crossways which separate the huts. The house
of Joseph much resembled, doubtless, those poor shops,
lighted by the door, serving at once as working-booth,
kitchen, and bed-chamber, and having for their furni-
ture a mat, some cushions on the ground, one or two
clay vessels, and a painted chest. The family, proceed-
ing from one or more marriages, was numerous enough.
Jesus had brothers and sisters, of whom he seems to
have been the eldest. All the others Temain obscure;
for it appears that the four persons represented as his
brothers, and of whom at least one, James, became of
great importance in the first years of the development
of Christianity, were his cousins-gennan. Mary, in
fact, had a sister, named also Mary, who married a cer-
tain Alpheus or Cleophas (these two names seem to
designate one person), and was the mother of several
sons, who played a considerable paart among the first
disciples of Jesus. These cousins-german, who ad-
hered to the young master while his true brothers op-
posed him, took the name of "brothers of the Lord."
The true brothers of Jesus were, as well as their
mother, of no importance till after his death. . . .
His sisters married at Nazareth, and there he passed
the years of his first youth. Nazareth was a small
town . . . the population at present is from three
to four thousand souls ; and it can not have changed
much. The cold there is keen in winter, and the cli-
mate very healthy. The town, as at that epoch all
the smaller Jewish towns, was a collection of huts built
without style, and must have presented the dry and
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•poor aspect which villages in the Semitic countries
still oflFer. The houses, as far as appears, did not diiFer
much from those cubes of stone, without elegance
either exterior or interior, which now cover the richer
parts of the Xibanus, and which, mingled with vines
and fig-trees, have still a very agreeable look. The
surrounding country, on the other hand,. is charming ;
and no spot in the world was so fitted for dreams of
absolute happiness. Even in our days Nazareth is still
a delicious place of residence — the only spot, perhaps,
in Palestine, where the soul feels itself somewhat re-
lieved from the burden which oppresses it in the midst
of desolation unequalled. The people are amiable
and cheerful ; the gardens are fresh and green. An-
toninus Martyr, at the end of the sixth century, drew
an enchanting picture of the fertility of the country
round, comparing it to Paradise. Some valleys on the
western side fully justify his description. The foun-
tain, round which were gathered the life and gayety
of the small town, is destroyed ; its choked-up chan-
nels give now only turbid water. But the beauty of
the -women who meet there in the evening — that
beauty which was already marked in the sixth century,
and in which people saw a gift of the Virgin Mary —
is preserved in a striking manner. It is the Syrian
type, in all its grace, so full of languor. Doubtless,
Mary was there almost every day, and took her place,
the urn on her shoulder, in the string of her fellow*
countrywomen who have left no name. Antoninus
Martyr remarked that the Jewish women, elsewhere
disdainful to Christians, are here full of afiability.
Even to the present day religious ; animosities ure less
keen at Nazareth than clsewhera
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His Touth and Education. He learned to read and
write, doubtless according to the method of the East,
which consists in placing in the child's hands a book,
which he repeats in cadence with his little comrades
until he knows it by heart. It is doubtful, however,
whether he knew well the Hebrew Scriptures in their
original tongue. His biographers make him quote
them from the Aramean translations. . . . The
school-master in the small Jewish towns was the Haz-
an or reader in the synagogues. Jesus frequented
little the higher schools of the scribes, or Soferim
(Nazareth, perhaps, had not one of them) ; and he had
none of those titles which confer, in vulgar eyes, the
rights of knowledge. It would, nevertheless, be a great
error to imagine that Jesus was what we should now
call uneducated, . . It is not probable that he had
learned Greek. That language was little spread in
Judea beyond the classes which shared in the govern-
ment, and the towns inhabited by pagans, like Cesanea.
The idiom proper to Jesus was the Syriac dialect,
mixed with Hebrew, then spoken in Palestine. . . .
Neither directly nor indirectly did any element of Hel-
lenic culture reach Jesus. He knew nothing beyond
Judaism ; his mind preserved that frank naivete which
an extended and varied culture always enfeeblea
Nay, within the bosom of Judaism, he remained a
stranger to many efforts that had been made, often
parallel to his own. On the one hand, the asceticism
of the Essenians or Therapeutae, on the other, the fine
essays of religious philosophy made by the Jewish
school of Alexandria, and of which his contemporary
Philo was the ingenious interpreter, were unknown to
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him. , . . Happily for him he knew nothing of
the strange scholasticism which was being taught at Je-
rusalem, and which was ultimately to form the Talmud
If some Pharisees had already brought it into Galilee,
he did not attend to them ; and, when, afterwards, he
came in contact with this silly casuistry, it inspired
him only with disgust. One may suppose, neverthe-
less, that the principles of Hillel were not unknown to
him. Hillel, fifty years before him, had uttered Apho-
risms which had much analogy to his own. By his
poverty humbly endured, by the sweetness of his char-
acter, by his opposition to hypocrites and to priests,
Hillel was the true master of Jesus, if it is lawful to
talk of a master when one is concerned with so high
an originality. . . . The reading of the Old Tes-
tament made far more impression upon him. . . .
The law appears not to have had much charm for him.
He believed that a better could be made. But the
religious poetry of the Psalms was in wonderful accord
with his lyrical soul ; they remained, all his life, his
food and sustenance. The prophets, in particular
Isaiah and his continuator of the time of the Captivity,
were, with their brilliant dreams of the future, their im-
petuous eloquence, their invectives mingled with en-
chanting pictures, his true masters. He read, doubtless,
also, some of the apocryphal works — that is to say, of
those writings sufficiently modem, the authors of which,
in order to give themselves an authority more willingly
allowed to the very ancient writings, sheltered them-
selves under the names of prophets and patriarchs.
One of these books above all, struck him ; it was the
Book of Daniel . . . Betimes his character in
19
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part revealed itself. The legends delight in showing
him, from his childhood, revolting against paternal
authority, and walking from common paths in order
to follow his calling. It is certain, at least, that the
relations of kindred were to him of small concern.
His family do not seem to have liked him ; and, at
times, he is found hard towards them. Jesus, like all
men exclusively preoccupied by an idea, came to regard
the ties of blood as of small account.
Galilee and Sovihem Judea. Every people called
to high destinies ought to be a small complete world,
enclosing opposed poles within its bosom. Greece
had, at a few leagues from each other, Sparta and
Athens, two antipodes to a superficial observer, but in
reality rival sisters, necessary the one to the other. It
was the same with Judea. Less brilliant in one sense
than the development of Jerusalem, that of the north
was on the whole much more fruitful ; the most livipg
performances of the Jewish people always came thence.
A complete absence of the sentiment of nature, bor-
dering somewhat on the dry, the narrow, the sullen,
struck all works of purely Hierosolymite origin with a
character grandiose indeed, but sad and repulsive.
With her solemn doctors, her insipid canonists, her
hypocritical and atrabilious devotees, Jerusalem could
not have conquered humanity. . . . The north
alone produced Christianity ; Jerusalem, on the con-
trary, is the true native country of the obstinate Juda-
ism which, founded by the Pharisees and fixed by the
Talmud; has traversed the Middle Ages and reached
our own days. A ravishing natural scenery contri-
buted to form this spirit, much less austere, less fiercely
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monotheistic, if I may so say, which impressed upon
all the dreams of the Galilean mind something idyllic
and charming. The saddest country in the world is,
perhaps, the region near Jerusalem. Galilee, on the
other hand, is a land very green, very shady, smiling
all over — the true land of the Song of Songs and of
the chants of the Well-beloved. During the two
months of March and April the champaign is a dense
thicket of flowers of incomparable freshness and col-
ors. The animals there are small, but of extreme do-
cility. ... In no country in the world do the
mountains lay themselves out with more harmony or
inspire higher thoughts. Jesus seems to have particu-
larly loved them. The most important acts of ins
divine career took place on the mountains ; there was
he best inspired ; it was there that he held secret com-
munion with the ancient prophets, and that he showed
himself to the eyes of disciples already transfigured.
. . . Jesus lived and grew up in this intoxicating
medium; but, from his infancy, he made almost annu-
ally the journey to Jerusalem for the festival.
The Theology of Jesus. A high notion of Deity,
which he did not owe to Judaism, and which seems to
have been in all its parts the creation of his own great
soul, was, in a manner, the principle of his whole
power. . . . The highest consciousness of Deity
that has ever existed in the breast of humanity was
that of Jesus. One sees, on the other hand, that Jesus,
starting from such a disposition of soul as his, never
could have been a speculative philosopher like Cakya-
Mouni. Nothing is farther from scholastic theology
than the Gospel. The speculations of the Greek
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fathers on the divine essence came firom quite another
spirit. God conceived immediately as Father — ^this is
all the theology of Jesus. ... It is probable that,
from the first, he regarded himself as being to God in
the relation of a son to his father. Here is his great
act of originality ; in this he is not like one of his race.
Neither Jew nor Mussulman has understood this deli-
cious theology of love. The God of Jesus is not that
fatal master who kills us when he pleases, condemns
us when he pleases, saves us when he pleases. The
God of Jesus is Our Father.
Matured Notion of his Mission. This name " King-
dom of God," or "Kingdom of Heaven," was the fa-
vofite term with Jesus for expressing the revolution
which he brought into the world. Like almost all the
other Messianic terms, it came from the Book of Dan-
iel. According to the author of that extraordinary
book, to the four profane kingdoms, destined to sink,
a fifth empire was to succeed, which should be that of
the Saints, and should endure forever. This kingdom
of God upon the earth had naturally received diverse
interpretations. . . . All that Jesus owed to John
was, to some extent, lessons in preaching and popular
action. Prom that moment, in fact, he preached with
much more force, and imposed himself on the crowd
with authority. It seems, also, that his sojourn near
John, less by the action of the Baptist than by the
natural progress of his own thoughts, greatly matured
his ideas respecting the "Kingdom of Heaven." His
watchword thenceforward was "Good tidings " — news
that the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand. Jesus will
no longer be merely a delightftil moralist, aspiring to
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SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL HIST. 293
enclose sublime lessons in some loving and brief aphor-
ism ; he is the transcendant revolutionist who strives
to renew the world from its foundations, and to found
on earth the ideal which he has conceived. To " wait
for the Kingdom of God " will be the synonym for
being a disciple of Jesus. . . . Who is to estab-
lish this Elingdom of God ? Let us remember that the
first thought of Jesus — a thought so profound with
him that it had probably no origin, but belonged to
the very roots of his being — ^was that he was the Son
of God, the intimate of his Father, the doer of his
will ; and then the answer of Jesus to such a question
will not be doubtful. The conviction that he would
cause God to reign possessed itself of his spirit in a
manner quite absolute. He considered himself as the
universal reformer. Heaven, earth, all nature, mad-
ness, malady, and death are but his instruments. In
his access of heroic will he believes himself all-power-
fuL If the Earth is not ready for this' last transforma-
tion, the Earth will be burnt, purified by fire and the
breath of God. A new Heaven will be created, and
the whole world will be peopled with the angels of
Grod A radical revolution, embracing even physical,
nature itself — ^such was the fundamental thought of
Jesus.
Inadeqtiate Modem Appreciation of great Characters
and Movementa. Our principles of positive science are
hurt by the dreams which the plan of Jesus embraced.
We know the history of the earth ; cosmical revolu-
tions of the kind which Jesus expected are produced
only by geological or astronomical causes, the connec-
tion of which with moral matters has never been
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294 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
ascertained. But, to be just to great creative minds,
it is necessary not to stop at the prejudices they may
have shared with their time. . . . The deism of
the eighteenth century and a certain kind of protest-
antism have accustomed us to consider the founder of
the Christian faith only as a great moralist, a benefac-
tor of humanity. We see in the Gospel only good
maxims; we throw a prudent veil over the strange
intellectual state in which it was bom. There are
people, also, who regret that the French Revolution
went more than once out of the track of principles,
and was not the work of wise and moderate men.
Let us not impose our small plans of middle-class good
sense upon those extraordinary movements so greatly
beyond our stature. Let us continue to admire the
" morality of the Gospel " — ^let us suppress in our reli-
gious instructions the chimera that was the soul of it ;
but let us not believe that, by simple ideas of good-
ness or individual morality, the world is ever stirred.
The idea of Jesus was much more profound ; it was
the most revolutionary idea that was ever conceived
in a human brain ; it must be taken in its totality, and
not with those timid suppressions which retrench from
it precisely that which made it efiFective for the regen-
eration of humanity. Fundamentally, the ideal is
always a Utopia. When we wish at present to repre-
sent the Christ of modern consciousness, the consoler,
the judge of these new times, what do we do ? That
which Jesus himself did 1830 years ago. We suppose
the conditions of the real world altogether other than
they are ; we represent a moral deliverer breaking,
without arms, the chains of the negro, ameliorating
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SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL HIST., 295
the condition of the poor, freeing the oppressed nations.
We forget that this supposes a world turned upside-
down, the climate of Virginia and that of Congo modi-
fied, the blood and race of millions of men changed,
our social complications brought back to a chimerical
simplicity, the political stratifications of Europe tilted
out of their order."
What is all this but the sheerest and most extrava-
gant moonshine ? What shadow or even pretence of a
shadow of historical testimony or historical evidence
of any kind does Renan give us ? Not a particle of
evidence of any kind, except the vagaries of his own
brain, does he pretend to give. Strauss, Renan, and
all the rest simply start with the principle that a mira-
cle is impossible, and then any hypothesis to ac-
count for the existence of Christianity, however wild,
absurd and self-contradictory it may be, is more rational
than the belief in its miraculous origin so simply and
so clearly stated in our sacred books.
Compare the following passages : (1) " So long as
the Gospels are regarded as historical sources, in the
strict sense of the word, so long a historical view of
the life of Jesus is impossible." (^Strauss p. 40.) For
" historical enquiry refuses absolutely to recognize any-
where any such thing " as a miracle (p. 146). (2) " In
the person and work of Jesus nothing supernatural
happened ; ... for thus much we can soon dis-
cover about our Gospels, that neither all nor any of
them display such historical trustworthiness as to com-
pel our reason to the acceptance of a miracle " (p. 15).
Similarly M. Renan : (1) " The first twelve chap-
ters of Acts are a tissue of miracles. Now, an absolute
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296 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
rule of criticism is, to allow no place in historical nar-
ration to miracles " (p. 43). (2) " Show me a speci-
men of these things, and I will admit them. . . .
The onvM prohandi in science rests with those who
allege a fact" (p. 45.)
HYPOTHESIS OF SCHENKEL,
Prof. Daniel Schenkel is probably the highest au-
thority among the German rationalists of the present
generation ; and his is the most recent efiFort at con-
atrudtng the life of Jesus out of one's own inward con-
sciousness, without reference or rather in direct opposi*
tion to the historical testimony on the subject*
From his own inward consciousness and without any
external testimony, he thinks himself competent to
correct the Gospel narrative as follows : " Jesus was
bom at Nazareth, not at Bethlehem. He was not in
the wilderness all the time of the temptation, nor did
he abstain from food. He made no journey to Jerusa-
lem but the last, which terminated in his death. John
the Baptist did not recognize Jesus' Messiahship, nor
testify of him, nor urge any disciples to follow him.
Jesus could not possibly have said that not one jot or
tittle of the Old Testament would pass away. He
could not have referred to his resurrection before his
death, for he was not raised, and if he had been, he
could not have known it beforehand. "Of a suflfering
Messiah the Old Testament knows nothing."
* The character of Jesus portrayed. A Biblical Essaj with aa
Appendix. Bj Dr. Daniel Schenkel, Professor of Theology, Heidel-
berg. Translated from the third German- edition, with introduction
and notes, by W. H. Fumess, D. D. Boston : Little, Brown & Co.
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SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL HIST. 297
Of the writers of the four Gospels " Mark he thinks
the most accurate of all, though many things have
been added by another hand, which are not trustwor-
thy. Matthew was written by a Jewish disciple, and,
as it attempts to prove that the prophecies of a Jewish
Messiah found fulfiillment in Jesus, much of it must be
rejected. Luke adds many incidents and parables to
adapt the new religion to the Gentile world, and these
must be carefully winnowed. Little reliance can be
placed on John's Gospel, for it contradicts the histor-
ical order, by making Jesus have a distinct conception
of hia work from the beginning. This accords, indeed,
with Old Testament teaching, and with the plan of
God as revealed, but it can not have a place in Dr.
Schenkel's historical theory, and must be rejected."
" Now one naturally imagines, from such statements,
that Dr. Schenkel must doubt the veracity of the Gos-
pel writers. It would seem as if there were but two
alternatives in the case ; either they told the simple
truth, which they claim to have known, and to whose
veracity they bore witness by suflfering and death ; or else
they invented the whole or a part to deceive the world.
But his theory is strangely elastic, and saves their credit
while it denies their statements." He says :
" It is no device of writers aiming to establish a point,
still less, as from a low historical point of view it may
be thought, is it falsehood and deceit that we have
here. In these extraordinary accounts we have the
unconscious homage of a religiously inspired imagina-
tion paid to Jesus by disciples and friends."*
I can not see that Dr. Schenkel has improved at all
•♦ Christian Watchman and Reflector.
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298 THE BOOKS 01> THE BIBLE.
upon Strauss, or that he is really any more reliable
than Renan. All these hypotheses are utterly baseless,
they have not a foot to stand upon, they are con-
structed not only without historical testimony, but in
direct opposition to all the historical testimony we ac-
tually possess on the subject. They are simply the
outgrowth of the fancy and the imagination of the
writers. They are in fact the Apocryphal Gospels of
the nineteenth century, in every respect as apocry-,
phal as those compositions of the fourth, fifth and sixth
centuries which have already passed under review,
only adapted to the faithlessness of this generation as
those were to the superstitious credulity of the times
in which they originated.
HYPOTHESIS OP F. C. BAUR.
It is generally admitted by these theorizers that
there was no intentional deception on the part of the
writers of our Gospels. Though there is very little,
if any historical truth in their compositions, yet their
intentions were good ; a religious imagination, a harm-
less enthusiasm, an amiable fanaticism guided their
pens. F. C. Baur, the founder and the most brilliant
representative of the famous Tuebingen school, takes
a somewhat different view. The Gospels were orig-
inally written for the express purpose of deception,
for the express purpose of sustaining the theology of
Paul against that of Peter, or the theology of Peter
against that of Paul. Of course there is no historical
testimony to that effect, he does not even pretend to
any ; he makes his conclusion from internal evidence
alone ; yet, strange to say, these writings have been
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SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL HIST. 299
SO modified and smoothed over since their original pro-
duction, that all traces of this controversial tendency
have pretty much disappeared from the pages. The
following statements are from an elaborate article in
the London Quarterly Review :
"According to Baur, each of the Gospels had a ten-
dency — ^was written for a purpose. There was, he
alleges, a much more active feud between two oppo-
site elements in the early church— between the Ebion-
itish or Petrine element and the Pauline — than would
be gathered from the New Testament itself This
controversy began from the time of the apostles and
did not end until the middle of the second century.
It was a contest between those who viewed Christianity
as Judaism and the Lord as the Messiah, and those who
viewed it as a new principle by which both Judaism
and heathenism were to be moulded and transformed
into a new system. Of the former opinion Peter was
the chief champion ; the supersedure of temple and
law in favor of Christianity, an all-embracing system,
was the work of Paul. But the contest, says Baur,
was much more obstinate and lasting than we should
infer from the Acts of the Apostles. The life of Paul
was passed in the struggle for recognition as one of
the apostles, for perfect equality of Jew and Gentile
converts, for emancipation from the law. But the dis-
pute continued far beyond his life, and all the early
church literature is to be interpreted by the light of
this dispute. The books of the New Testament are
either party-writings on one side or the other, or else
they are later productions, intended to conciliate and
conceal this difference, and to unite all Christians upon
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300 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
one common ground And most of the books are of
this latter class, and it follows, that they are not the
genuine productions of those whose names they bear.
The lateness of St Mark's Gospel is inferred from the
absence of controversial matter and other reasona
St Luke^s Grospel had originally a strong Pauline and
anti-Jewish tendency ; but in the later edition of it,
which we possess, this tendency was much modified
and softened ! St Matthew must likewise have been
modified, the original Gospel being very difierent from
that which we now possess, more decidedly Judaic in
'tendency,' whilst the Greek Gospel as we possess it
has the general character of the other two Gospels^
one of conciliation between the two great parties !
The critical power that can discover a strong Gen-
tile prejudice in a narrative, after some one has gone
over it with the express purpose of taking out all signs
of this, does not belong to the region of science but
of second sight. If ever there were books free from
all taint of prejudice, from the stifling heat of contro-
versy, the four Gospels are these books. If it had
been reserved for this century to disclose a hidden pur-
pose and bias in the writers, the grounds on which it
rests should surely be accessible to us all. We can
conceive that eyes long exercised in the twilight of
antiquity may catch forms and shades that escape our
own ; but eyes that read not only what is there, but
what would have been there if it had not been taken
out, are beyond the reach even of imagination."
It is scarcely necessary to give any specimens of
Schwegler, Keim, Volkmar, and other critics of the
Tuebingen school. Though difiering somewhat from
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SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL HIST. 301
the Hegelians already noticed, practically they belong
to the same category. There is the same self-conceit
and self-deification, the same reckless disregard of
facts, the same extravagant baselessness and ground-
lessness of speculation. In one species of folly, they
even exceed Gfroerer ; for while they admit the wri-
tings of the apostolic fiithers, Papias, Ignatius, Irenaeus,
etc., to be ancient and genuine, they affirm that the
writings of the New Testament ascribed to John, Paul,
Peter, etc., are spurious, and the product of a later
age. They have been abundantly refuted by Thiersch,
Ebrard, Dorner, and other writers ; and though they
are the most recent representatives ot the sceptical
spirit in Germany, and some of them (as for example,
Baur), accomplished scholars and powerful writers,
they are already growing obsolete, and fast hastening
to a deserved oblivion.
Truth alone is immutable and permanent ; error has
numberless forms, and in all of them it is transient,
and short-lived.
After all these assaults and speculations the honest
old Bible stands just where it did before, speaks the
same language, exerts the same influence, and emits
the same heavenly radiance. This sure word ofproph-
ecy will remain, and we do well to take heed to it^ as to
a light that ehineth in a dark place^ till the day dawn^
and the day star arise in our hearts.
The enormous self-confidence and self-estimation of
this whole class of Gospel assailers, most forcibly re-
minds us of the words of Holy writ : Seest thou a man
zvise in his own conceit f iJiere is more hope of a fool
than of him. God resisteth theproud^ hut giveth grace
to the humble.
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302 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
THE REAL VALUE OP THESE SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL
HISTORY.
These assaults on the Gospels consist of two parts,
namely, 1, Objections to the historical truth of the
Gospels, derived from the narrative itself, and, 2, Hy-
potheses to account for the existence and influence of
the Gospels, supposing them to be historically untrue.
It is these hypotheses only which we have thus far
considered. The objections are matters of detail, and
must be considered in detail, and there is no room for
them in a volume of this kind. A few will be selected
as specimens of the whole, and answers given to them
which will show how all the rest may be answered.
In considering these objections, we must always bear
it in mind that the Gospels are not, and do not profess
to be, complete histories. They are simply detached
memoirs, or select anecdotes, intended solely to illus-
trate the character and teachings of Christ, to show
what kind of a teacher he was, and to give an idea of
the substance and manner of his teaching. This the
writers themselves affirm in so many words. Says
John, at the close of his narrative: There are also
many other things which Jems did^ the which^ if they
should he written every one^ I suppose that even the
world itself could not contain the hooks that should he
written.
And many other signs truly did Jesus in tlie presence
of his disciples^ which are not written in this hook.
But these are written that ye might hdieve that Jesus is
the Christy the Son of God^ and that helieving ye might
have life through his name. John xxi. 25 ; xx. 50, 31.
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SUBSTITUTES FOB THE GOSPEL HIST. 303
Out of the countless multitude of events in our Sav-
iour's life, and from his numberless teachings, the diflFer-
ent evangelists select different transactions and different
discourses for this purpose, all equally appropriate, a^
would also have been thousands of others which are
left unrecorded. The evangelists sometimes repeat
each other, but very often they do not ; and not one of
them undertakes, or pretends, to give a complete narra-
tive of all that Jesus did and said, but on the contrary,
they all carefully and expressly disclaim any such un-
dertaking or intention.
The most plausible of the objections to which we
allude, are derived from supposed contradictions in
the Gospel narrative ; but such contradictions are as-
sumed and supposed; they have never yet been proved.
For example, in Luke vil 1-10, we are informed,
that when Jesus was in Capernaum, a centurion there
sent friends to him, requesting him to heal a sick serv-
ant of his, who was very dear to him.
In John iv. 46-53, we are told, that when Jesus was
in Cana, a nobleman of Capernaum, whose son was
sick, went himself to Jesus, and asked him to heal his
son.
In both cases the sick person was restored without
being seen by Jesus.
Because there are points of similarity in the two
narratives, the objectors assume that they are intended
as narratives of the same event ; and then they point
out the discrepancies between them, to show that the
Gospel history is unworthy of credit. The fallacious-
ness of this mode of reasoning, especially when con-
sidered in connection with the nature of the Gospel
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304 THE BOOKS OF THB BIBLE.
narrative as already pointed out, is very easily demon-
strated. We will suppose two discourses by two dif-
ferent authors, intended to illustrate American charac-
ter by incidents of American history. One of these
authors gives in illustration, the battle of Baltimore ;
the other, the battle of New Orleans in 1815. la these
two battles there were remarkable coincidences, as
well as remarkable diversities. They both took place
during the same war ; in both, an assault was made by
a British army on an American city ; in both, the
British commander was killed, and his troops repulsed.
But, in the one case there were cotton-bale intrench-
ments; in the other, there were none. In the one
battle. Gen. Jackson gained great celebrity; in the
other, he was not present. One battle occurred on the
southern border of the United States ; the other, on
the eastern. Some fifteen hundred or two thousand
years hence, a Hegelian critic gets hold of these two
discourses — and for the sake of destroying the credit
of both, affirms that they both refer to the same bat-
tle ; and gives the purpose and object of the writers,
namely, the illustration of American character from
American history, and states all the resemblances, to
prove that they do both intend the same event ; and
then states all the discrepancies to show that they are
not reliable histories. He will not hear to the sug-
gestion that they may be giving accounts of difiFerent
battles — the similarities are too numerous and striking
to admit of that idea; nor will he allow that one of
the two narratives, after all, may be true, for the style
and tone of the two are so exactly alike, that if one
is false, the other must certainly be false also.
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SUBSTITUTES FOR THEJ OOSFEI, HIST. 305
Tliis is a fair iUustration of a multitude of the mo^i
plausible and strongest of the objections of Strauss
and his colaborers ; and sometimes they are even ten-
fold more fallacious and absurd, thaA tW
For example, Luke xvii, 11''19, at the gate of the
city of Nain, Jesus raised from the dead a young man,,
the only son of a widowed mother.
Mark V. 35-43, in the house of Jairus, a ruler of the
synagogue, Jesus raises froift tibe dead a daught^ of
this Jairus, a little girl tweh?e years old-.
Now, says Gfroerer, there ai?e such resemblances in
these narratives, that they must be identical, yet so
diverse are they, that they destroy the historical credit
of the writers. The difference of place, the difference
of sex in both parent and child, the diversity of all
the attending circumstances, prove, not that they were
two different transactions, but that the writers are not
truthful ; for the resemblances are so strong, that the
proof of identity is irresistible^ whatever improbabili-
ties may intervene. What are these resemblances
which make the conclusion of identity so irresistible !
Why, these and these only — (1) they were both
young people, (2) they each had a living parent, (3)
they both died, and (4) they were both raided from
the dead. By the same kind of argument we might
prove irresistibly, and in spite of ajl inherent improb-
abilities, the identity of Gen. Jackson and Mr. Van
Buren's grandmother, that they were one and the same
person — for (1) they were both old people, (2) they
were both very fond of Mr. Van Buren, (3) they both
died, and (4) they neithej of them ever rose from the
dead — and the difference of sex, and name, and place
^ 20
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of abode, and all things of that kind are merely the
discrepancies of unreliable historians.
Such is the character of the objections which these
critics make — such is the kind of contradictions which
they point out — and when we examine their hypotheses^
we find them quite as baseless as their objectwna^ and
even more so. Their positive side is no more tenable
than their negative. Their constructive efforts are even
more decided failures than their destructive.
Their hypotheses have absolutely nothing to stand
upon. They are made wholly out of air and fog, and
the moment the sun shines on them they are gone.
We can at any time and on any historical subject what-
ever, make a thousand suppositions, all false, yet all as
plausible as any of these. That fine piece of bur-
lesque by Archbishop Whately, entitled " Historical
Doubts respecting Napoleon Bonaparte," in which he
shows how exceedingly improbable it is that any such
person as Napoleon ever existed, is tenfold more plaus-
ible and sustained by arguments tenfold stronger
than many of these Hegelian hypotheses of the Gos-
pel history.
In all their hypotheses they entirely mistake the
times and the men wherein the Gospel history origin-
ated. Their theories are such as could have arisen
only in the minds of studious, speculative men, greatly
in want of something to do, and driven to the neces-
sity of inventing something to say that shall be new,
striking and attractive, in order to draw attention to
themselves and their sayings ; and they seem to imag-
ine that tthe early promoters of Christianity were very
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SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL HIST. 307
much the same kind of men and in very nearly the
same circumstances as themselves. Their theories all
smell very strongly of the shop. In their judgment
of the evangelists, apostles and martyrs of the early
church, they are quite as much out of the way, as an
exquisite of the west end of London would be, if he
were to undertake, from his own feelings, purposes
and daily employments, to form an estimate of the
feelings, purposes and daily employments of a back-
woodanan in the Western States of America. Were
they to ask me the question : " Why are we not quali-
fied to write critiques of the Gospel history?" — I
would reply to them, as Henry More did to Southey,
when he inquired: " Why am not I qualified to write
a biography of John Wesley?" "Sir, thou hast
nothing to draw with, and the well is deep."
To think of the apostle John writing his Gospel as
Weisse supposes — or the early teachers of Christianity
inventing myths as Strauss imagines — ^what can be
conceived more utterly inappropriate to the times and
the men — ^more entirely beyond the limits of all inhe-
rent probability ? Indeed, these German unbelievers
do not intend to be probable, nor have they any seri-
ous purpose of discovering and advocating truth.
They delight in a sort, of intellectual gladiatorship,
and nothing with them is too serious to be made a
plaything of. They sport with God and eternity, with
heaven and hell, with their own souls and the souls of
their fellow-men ; all the while thinking only of the fine
and fruitful subjects they are getting for lectures and
books — ^but when their speculations are imported into
this land of serious purpose and earnest endeavor and
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308 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
practical results, they became immediately matters of
life and death, of eternal life and eternal death, to
thousands. That which is a fashionable, though far
from an innocent, amusement in Germany, is a deadly,
death dealing vork in America.
But what are these mytha^ of which these assailants
of the Gospel say so much ? They suppose them to
be fanciful or fabulous narratives, having but a remote
resemblance to events of actual occurrence, and in-
tended mainly tp embody certain general ideas, which
the inventors wished in this way to preserve for the
world. According to Strauss, the myths of the Gos^
pel illustrate mainly the dominion of mind over nature.
The very idea of such myths so near the time and the
place of the alleged occurrence of the events, presents
to the sober mind nothing but the aspect of a blank
impossibility. According to Strauss's own showing,
not a single generation had passed away, before the
myths began to spring up like mushrooms on the very
soil of Palestine itself As well might we now have a
mythical history of the last war with Great Britain, or
myths of the presidential election in 1840 — ^and these
poetical romances, these moral apologues, these elabo-
rate fictions designed to illustrate great moral truths,
invented and put in circulation by the hard old soldiers
and the tough old politicians who took a leading part
in the actual events, (whatever they might ho} — ^and
implicitly believed as actual matters of fact by the
simple hearted people who did the fighting and the
voting ! Surely the legends and religious fables of
the patristic and mediaeval period do not equal in
baselessness and extravagance the inventions and hy-
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SUBSTITUTES FOR THE GOSPEL HIST. 309
potheses of these philosophic Gofepel-assailers in the
middle of the nineteenth century ; and besides, the for-
mer have at least the advantage of being imbued with
the spirit of veneration and the love Of God, of which
the latter have not a particle.
True, there were apocr3rphal gospels, containing
romances and myths — ^but these, for the most part,
were remote both in time and place from the actual
scenes of the Gospel history, and written after men
had begun to withdraw into deserts and caves and con-
vents, to spend their lives in solitude and mortification,
hoping thereby to gain the favor of God ; instead of
going about doing good^ as Christ did, and as he taught
all the early preachers of Christianity to do.
Theodore Parker occasionally says some very good
things, and he happily illustrates the folly of this whole
method of inventing history in regard to the Gospels
leather than studying history, by applying it to an im-
portant event in our own American annals. He says :
" The story of the Declaration of Independence is
liable to many objections, if we examine \iala mode
Strauss. The Congress was held at a mythical town,
whose very name is suspicious, — Philadelphia, — ^broth-
erly love. The date is suspicious^ it was the fourth
day of the fourth month (reckoning from Aprils as it
is probable the Heraclidae and Scandinavians, possible
that the aboriginal Americans, and certain that the
Hebrews did). Now four was a sacred number with
the Americans ; the president was chosen for four
years ; there were four departments of affairs ; four
divisions of the political powers, namely^ the people,
the congress, the executive, and the judiciary, etc.
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Besides, which is still more incredible, three of the
presidents, two of whom, it is alleged, signed the de-
claration, died on the fourth of July, and the two lat-
ter exactly Jifty years after they had signed it, and
about the same hour of the day. The year also is
suspicious; 1776 is but an ingenious combination of
the sacred number, four^ which is repeated three times,
and then multiplied by itself to produce the date ;
thus 444x4—1776. . . . Still farther, the declar-
ation is metaphysical, and presupposes an acquaintance
with the transcendental philosophy on the part of the
American people. Now the " Kritik of Pure Reason "
was not published till after the declaration was made.
Still farther, the Americans were never, to use the
nebulous expression of certain philosophers, an "idealo-
transcendental-and-subjectire," but an ** objective-and-
concretivo-practical " people, to the last degree ; there-
fore a metaphysical document, and most of all a " legal-
congressional-metaphysical " document, is highly sus-
picious if found among them. Besides, Hualteperah,
the great historian of Mexico, a neighboring state,
never mentions this document; and farther still, if
this declaration had been made, and accepted by the
whole nation, as it is pretended, then we can not ac-
count for the fact, that the fundamental maxim of that
paper, namely, the soul's equality to itself — '^ all men
are bom free and equal " — was perpetually lost sight
of, and a large portion of the people kept in slavery ;
still later, petitions, — supported by this fundamental
article — for the abolition of slavery, were rejected
by Congress with unexampled contempt, when, if
the history is not mythical, slavery never had a legal
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SUBSTITUTES FOB THE GOSPEL HIST. 311
existence after 1776, etc., eta But we could go on
this way forever."
The reader will notice that the names of Polycarp
and Irenaeus occur in this volume as witnesses to
nearly every book of the New Testament. To show
how immediately these witnesses are connected with
the apostles themselves, and that there is absolutely
no room and no time for the formation of the myths
on which Strauss, and Renan, and the other roman-
cers on the Gospel history rely, we close this chapter
with an extract of a letter from Irenaeus to Flori-
nus, an elder in the church at Rome. (Euseb. E. H.
V. 20.
" For I saw thee when I was yet a boy in the lower
Asia with Polycarp, moving in great splendour at
court, and endeavoring by all means to gain his es-
teem. I remember the events of those times much
better than those of more recent occurrence. As the
studies of our youth growing with our minds, unite
with it so firmly that I can tell also the very place
where the blessed Polycarp was accustomed to sit and
discourse ; and also his entrances, his walks, the com-
plexion of his life and the form of his body, and his
conversations with the people, and his familiar inter-
course with John, as he was accustomed to tell, as also
his familiarity with those that had seen the Lord.
How also he used to relate their discourses, and what
things he had heard from them concerning the Lord.
Also concerning his miracles, his doctrine, all these
were told by Polycarp, in consistency with the holy
Scriptures, as he had received them from the eye wit-
nesses of the doctrine of salvation. These things, by
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312 THE BOOEB OF THE BIBLE.
the mercy of God, and the opportunity then afforded
me, I attentively heard, noting them down, not on
paper, but in my heart; and these same facts I am
always in the habit, by the grace of God, to recall
faithfully to mind."
The same facts also are elated by Irenaeus, Contra
Haer. iii 3, 4. Notice here that Irenaeus had the
Christian Scriptures at the &ame time that he had the
oral testimony of Polycarp.
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CHAPTER NINTH.
ACTS OF THB APOSTLES AND THE APOCBTPHAL AGT&
ACTS OF THE APOSTLES.
From the first sentence in this book it is seen that
Luke intended it for a continuation of his Gospel
rather than a separate work. The Gospel was an ac-
count of what Jesus began to do and teach while on
earth in person, and the Acts, of what he continued,
after his ascension to heaven, to do and teach through
his apostles and by the Holy Spirit which he had
promised. Throughout the Acts it is Jesus who does
and teaches as really as in the Gospel. It is Jesus
who works the miracles, sustains Stephen, delivers and
enlightens Peter, converts and encourages and teaches
Paul, and so on through the book. The headings or
titles of the different books of the New Testament, as
of ancient books generally, were usually the work of
the publishers of the manuscript rather than of the
original authors. Hence the titles are somewhat varied
in successive publications ; in the New Testament books
the most ancient being the shortest and simplest
Thus in this book, the older manuscripts are entitled,
Acts of AposUea^ Acting qf Apostles^ The Acts of the
ApoBtiea^ The Acts of the Holy Apostles^ Luke the Evan-
gelist'B Acts of tJie Apostles^ and then toward the mid-^
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die ages, Acts of the holy and all-praiseworthy Apos-
tles^ written by the holy^ illustrious and all-praiseworthy
Luke the Evangelist The oldest titles, Acts or Acting
of Apostles^ are much the most appropriate, for the
book does not profess to give a full history of the
apostolic doings, or of any of the apostles ; but the
same course is pursued as in the Gospels ; a few lead-
ing pictures are presented, more or less connected
with each other, to give the reader an idea of what
the apostles did and how they discharged the impor-
tant trusts committed to them. Only three of the
apostles are particularly spoken of in the book, to wit,
James, Peter, and PauL Peter disappears from the
book after his imprisonment by Herod and his escape
aided by the angel (xii.), and appears but once after-
wards, at the council of Jerusalem (xv.); while almost
the entire book, from xiii. onward, is devoted to the
life and labors of Paul. The narrative occupies the
space of about thirty years ; there are but few chro-
nological notices in it, and these not very precise ; the
whole book is very brief, not much larger than some
single sermons ; yet so full and varied is the informa-
tion it conveys that it seems to the reader like a long
history. The story is told not in the way of dry ab-
stract, but of lively anecdote ; it combines in a won-
derful degree condensation and fulness ; there is one
systematic purpose throughout, but the most uncon-
strained freedom of manner; the style is perfectly sim-
ple yet wonderfully graphic and animated, and is most
skillfully varied as different persons aad scenes are to
be represented. This is seen to most advantage in
the different speeches that are reported, for though
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ACTS OF THE APOSTLES 315
they must be of necessity the very briefest of ab-
stracts, they are each, amazingly characteristic and
peculiar. Paul addressing the rough Jews in the in-
terior of Asia Minor, the polished Greeks of Athens,
the furious mob at Jerusalem, Festus the governor
and Agrippa the king at Caesarea, the elders of the
church at Miletus, is always the same Paul, yet speak-
ing in a style admirably varied to meet most skillfully
the peculiar circumstances of each case. Never before
nor since has an abbreviator of discourses retained so
perfectly in every case the characteristic features of
his original. It will be seen in the narrative of Paul's
journeys that Luke generally accompanied him from
xvi. onward, but was sometimes separated from him.
Chrysostom testifies that the book was read daily in
the churches between Easter and Pentacost in his time
(Horn. i. 477), though it was introduced later for
church reading than some of the other books. The
chief witnesses for the Acts are Barnabas, Clement of
Rome, Ignatius, Polycarp, Papias, Dionysius of Corinth,
Justin Martyr, the Church of Vienne and Lyons, Ire-
naeus, Tatian, Athenagoras, Clement of Alexandria,
TertuUian, Origen, Eusebius, Jerome. The testimony
is full, varied and explicit, but only a few brief speci-
mens can be given here.
Ignatius. "After his resurrection he did eat and
drink with them." Acts x. 41.
Papias. " This Justus is mentioned in the book of
Acts as the one over which the apostles prayed," eta
i. 23, 24.
Dionysius of Corinth. " Dionysius the Areopagite,
who was converted to the faith by Paul the apostle.
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according to the statement in the Acts of the Apos-
tles."
Irenaeus. "But that Luke was inseparable from
Paul, and his fellowJaborer in the Gospel he himself
makes manifest, for he says." (Then Irenaeus quotes
from the Acts the account of the separation of Paul
and Barnabas, and their missionary journeys in differ-
ent directions, and shows that Luke was with Paul
from the narrative in xvi 11, 13^ 16, etc.)
Athenagoras. " The world was made not as if God
needed anything." xviL 25.
TertuUian. "It is stated in the commentary by
Luke that at the third hour they were considered
drunken." ii 15.
Origen. " In the Acts ©f the Apostles Stephen tes-
tifies."
Eu8ebiu8. " Luke has left us in two inspired books-
one of these is the Gospel— the other is his Acts of the
Apostles. The Areopagite, called Dionysius, whom
Luke has recorded in his Acts." iii 4, also iL 22.
The testimony is full, unequivocal, uncontradicted,
that Luke wrote the Acts of the Apostles, the same
that we have in the New Testament ; and this the in-
ternal evidence clearly bhows.
Church of Lyons and Vienne. "As Stephen the
perfected martyr. Lord, lay not this sin to their
charge." vii. 60.
Clement of Alexandria, "As Luke in the Acts of
the Apostles mentions Paul saying. Ye men of Athens."
etc. xvii. 22, 23.
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THE APOCRYPHAL ACTS. 317
APOCRYPHAL ACTS OP THE APOSTLES.
Of these Prof. Tisehendorf, the most indefatigable
and successful scholar of modem times in this branch
of literature, published in 1851, thirteen, to wit: 1,
Acts of Peter and Paul ; 2, of Paul and Thecla ; 3, of
Barnabas by Mark; 4, of Philip; 6, of Philip in
Greece ; 6, of Andrew ; 7, of Andrew and Matthias ;
8, Acts and Martyrdom of Matthew ; 9, Acts of Thom-
as; 10, The Consummation (Teleioais) of Thomas; 11,
Acts of Bartholomew; 12, Acts of Thaddeus; 13,
Acts of John.
Some of these are of very early date, reaching as
high at least as the beginning of the third or latter
part of the second century ; but they were never de-
livered to any of the churches, they were written for
the most part, as Tertullian, Eusebius, Gelasius, Epiph-
anius, Jerome, Augustin, and other ancient witnesses
assure us (Tisehendorf, Proleg.), in the interest of some
particular error to which the churches were opposed,
and they never had any very wide circulation. The
most ancient existing manuscripts of these books are
generally not earlier than the 10th or the 11th century ;
and a slight inspection of them fully justifies the sound
discretion of the early Christians in rejecting them.
It is indeed surprising that books written so near the
apostolic times, and among the class of people to whom
the apostles preached, should be so entirely diflferent
from all the apostolic writings. To the candid thinker
the contrast aflFords one of the most striking proofs of
the absolute divine inspiration of the New Testament
J)Qoks. We will select for examination two of the
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318 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
best of these apocryphal Acts, those numbered 2 and
7 in the enumeration of Tischendorf, and will endeavor
to make the analysis sufficiently comprehensive to put
the reader entirely in possession of the means of judg-
ing between these and our sacred books.
ACTS OP PAUL AND THECLA.
This book must be very ancient, for it is mentioned
by TertuUian, who was bom A. D. 160. We have the
most satisfactory evidence that the book, as we now
read it, is to all intents and purposes the same as that
which was read by Tertullian, though of course, as is
the case with all ancient books, there are variations
and errors in the written text It sometimes had for
its title. Concerning the holy and glorious and illustri-
ous martyr Thecla, who was in Iconium. Thecla is a
saint both in the Greek and Romish churches, and her
virtues are celebrated by the latter on the 23d of Sep-
tember. The two oldest manuscripts which Tischen-
dorf found, are both in Paris, nd both of the eleventh
century.
Tertullian says the book was first written in the in-
terest of those that held that women had the right to
preach and baptize ; and it was much esteemed by the
early Quakers as sustaining their views of the position
of women in the church.
The following extract, being the first five chapters
in the old English translation by Archbishop Wake,
will give a sufficient idea of the whole book, and ena-
ble the reader to make a fair comparison between the
best of the apocryphal and the canonical Acts :
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THE APOCRYPHAL ACTS. 319
"When Paul went up to Iconium, after his flight jfrom
Antioch, Demas and Hermogenes became his compan-
ions, who were then ftill of hypocrisy. But Paul, look-
ing only at the goodness of God, did them no harm,
but loved them greatly. Accordingly he endeavored
to make agreeable to them all the oracles and doctrines
of Christ, and the design of the Gospel of God's well-
beloved Son, instructing them in the knowledge of
Christ, as it was revealed to him. And a certain man
named Onesiphorus, hearing that Paul was come to
Iconium, went out speedily to meet him, together with
his wife Lectra, and his sons Simmia and Zeno, to in-
vite him to their house. For Titus had given them a
description of Paul's personage, they as yet not know-
ing him in person, but only being acquainted with his
character. They went in the king's highway to Lystra,
and stood there waiting for him, comparing all who
passed by, with that description which Titus had given
them. At length they saw a man coming (namely,
Paul), of a low stature, bald (or shaved) on the head,
crooked thighs, handsome legs, hollow-eyed ; had a
crooked, nose; full of grace; for sometimes he ap-
peared as a man, sometimes he had the countenance
of an angel. And Paul saw Onesiphorus, and was
glad. And Onesiphorus said. Hail, thou servant of the
blessed God. Paul replied. The grace of God be with
thee and thy family. But Demas and Hermogenes
were moved with envy, and under a show of great
religion Demas said, and are not we also servants of
the blessed God? Why didst thou not salute us?
Onesiphorus replied. Because I have not perceived
in you the finiits of righteousness ; nevertheless, if ye
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320 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
are of that sort, ye shall be welcome to my house also.
Then Paul went into the House of Onesiphorus,
and there was great joy among the family on that ac-
count ; and they employed themselves in prayer, break-
ing of bread, and hearing Paul preach the word of
God concerning temperance and the resurrection, in
the following manner ; Blessed are the pure in heart ;
for they shall see God. Blessed are they who keep
their flesh undefiled (or pure) ; for they shall be the
temples of God. Blessed are the temperate (or
chaste); for God will reveal himself to them. Blessed
are they who abandon their secular enjoyments ; for
they shall be accepted of God. Blessed are they who
have wives, as though they had them not ; for they
shall be made angels of God. Blessed are they who
tremble at the word of God ; for they shall be com-
forted. Blessed are they who keep their Baptism
pure ; for they shall find peace with the Father, Son,
and Holy Ghost. Blessed are they who pursue the
wisdom (or doctrine) of Jesus Christ ; for they shall
be called the sons of the Most High. Blessed are they
who observe the instructions of Jesus Christ ; for they
shall dwell in eternal light Blessed are they, who for
the love of Christ abandon the glories of the world ;
for they shall judge angels, and be placed at the right
hand of Christ, and shall not suffer the bitterness of
the last judgment. Blessed are the bodies and souls
of virgins ; for they are acceptable to God, and shall
not lose the reward of their virginity ; for the word
of their (heavenly) Father shall prove effectual to
their salvation in the day of his Son, and they shall
enjoy rest for evermore.
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THE APOCRYPHAL ACTS. 821
While Paul was preaching this sermon in the church
which was in the house of Onesiphonis, a certain virgin
named Thecla (whose mother's name was Theoclia, sxid
who was betrothed to a man named Thamyris) sat at
a certain window in her house, from whence, by the
advantage of a window in the house where Paul was,
she both night and day heard Paul's sermons concern-
ing God, concerning charity, concerning faith in Christ,
and concerning prayer ; nor would she depart from
the window, till with exceeding joy she was subdued
to the doctrines of faith. At length, when she saw
many women and virgins going in to Paul, she earnestly
desired that she might be thought worthy to appear
in his presence, and hear the word of Christ ; for she
had not yet seen Paul's person, but only heard his ser-
mons, ajid that alone. But when she would not be
prevailed upon to depart from the window, her mother
sent to Thamyris, who came with the greatest pleasure,
as hoping now to marry her. Accordingly, he said to
Theoclia, Where is my Thecla? Theoclia replied,
Thamyris, I have something very strange to tell you ;
for Thecla, for the space of three days, will not move
from the window, not so much as to eat or drink, but
is so intent on hearing the artfrd and delu^ve discourses
of a certain foreigner, that I perfectly admire, Thamy-
ris, that a young woman of her known modesty, will
suffer herself to be so prevailed upon. For that man
has disturbed the whole city of Iconium, and even
your Thecla among others. All the women and young
men flock to him to receive his doctrine ; who, besides
all the rest, tells them, that there is but one God, who
alone is to be worshipped, and that we ought to live
21
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322 THB BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
in chastity. Notwithstanding this, my daughter Thecla,
like a spider's web, fastened to the window, is capti-
vated by the disconrses of Paul, and attends upon
them with prodigious eagerness, and vast delight ; and
thus, by attending on what he says, the young womaa
is seduced. Now then do you go, and speak to her,
for she is betrothed to you. Accordingly Thamyris
went, «Lnd having saluted her, taking care not to sur-
prise her, he said, Thecla, my spouse, why sittest thou
in this melancholy posture? What strange impres-
sions are made upon thee? Turn to Thamyris, and
blush. Her mother also spake to her after the same
manner, and said, Child, why dost thou sit so melan-
choly, and, like one astonished, makest no reply?
Then they wept exceedingly ; Thamyris, that he had
lost his spouse ; Theoclia, that she had lost her daugh-
ter ; and the maids, that they had lost their mistress;
and there was a universal mourning in the family.
But all these things made no impression upon Thecla,
so as to incline her so much as to turn to them, and
take notice of them; for she still regarded the dis-
courses of Paul. Then Thamyris ran forth into the
street, to observe who they were that went in to Paul,
and came out .from him ; and he saw two men engaged
in a very warm dispute, and said to them : Sirs, what
business have you here ? and who is that man within,
belonging to you, who deludes the minds of men, both
young men and virgins, persuading them, that thef
ought not to marry, but continue as they are? I
promise to give you a considerable sum, if you will
give me a just account of him ; for I am the chief per-
son of this city. Demas and Hermogenes replied, We
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THE APOCB¥PHAL ACTS. 323
can not so exactly tell who lie is, but this we know,
that he deprives young men of their (intended) wives,
and virgins of their (intended) husbands, by teaching,
there can be no future resurrection, unless ye continue
in chastity, and do not defile your flesh.
Then said Thamyris, Come along with me to my
house, and refresh yourselves. So they went to a
very splendid entertainment, where there was wine in
abundance, and very rich provision. They were
brought to a table very richly spread, and made to
drink plentifully by Thamyris, on account of the love
he had for Thecla, and his desire to marry her. Then
Thamyris said, I desire you would inform me what the
doctrines of this Paul are, that I may understand them ;
for I am under no small concern about Thecla, seeing
she delights in that stranger^s discourses, so that I am in
danger of losing my intended wife. Then Demas and
Hermogenes answered both together, and said. Let
him be brought before the governor Castellius, as one
who endeavors to persuade the people into the new
religion of the Christians, and he, according to the
order of Caesfiur, will put him to death, by which means
you will obtain your wife ; while we at the same time
will teach her that the resurrection which he speaks
of, is already come, and consists in our having children ;
and that we then arose again, when we came to the
knowledge of God. Thamyris, having this account
from them, was filled with hot resentment ; and rising
early in the morning, he went .to the house of One-
siphorus, attended by the magistrates, the jailor, and
a great multitude of people with staves, and said to
Paul, Thou hast perverted the city of Iconium, and,
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324 BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
among the rest, Thecla, who is betrothed to me, so that
now she will not many me. Thou shalt therefore go
with us to the governor Castellius. And all the multi-
tude cried out, Away with this impostor (magician),
for he has perverted the minds of our wives, and all
the people hearken to him.
Then Thamyris, standing before the governor's judg-
ment-seat, spake with a loud voice in the following
manner : 0 governor, I know not whence this man
cometh ; but he is one who teaches that matrimony is
unlawftiL Command him therefore to declare before
you for what reason he publishes such doctrines. While
he was saying thus, Demas and Hermogenes whispered
to Thamyris, and said. Say that he is a Christian, and
he will presently be put to death. But the governor
was more deliberate, and calling to Paul, he said. Who
art thou ? What dost thou teach ? They seem to lay
gross crimes to thy charge. Paul then spake with a
loud voice, saying, As I am now called to give an ac-
count, 0 governor, of my doctrines, I desire your
audience. That God, who is a God of vengeance, and
who stands in need of nothing but the salvation of his
creatures, has sent me to reclaim them from their
wickedness and corruptions, from all (sinful) pleasures,
and from death ; and to persuade them to sin no more.
On this account, God sent his Son Jesus Christ, whom
I preach, and in whom I instruct men to place their
hopes, as that person who only had such compassion
on the deluded world, that it might not, 0 governor,
be condemned, but have faith, the fear of God, the
knowledge of religion, and the love of trutL So that
if I only teach those things which I have received by
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THE APOCRYPHAL ACTS. 325
revelation from God, where is my crime ? When the
governor heard this, he ordered Paul to be bound, and
to be put in prison, till he should be more at leisure to
hear him more fully. But in the night, Thecla, taking
off her ear-rings, gave them to the turnkey of the
prison, who then opened the doors to her, and let her
in ; and when she made a present of a silver looking-
glass to the jailer, was allowed to go into the room
where Paul was ; then she sat down at his feet, and
heard from him the great things of God. And as she
preceived Paul not to be afraid of suflFering, but that
by divine assistance he behaved himself with courage,
her faith so far increased, that she kissed his chaina
At length Thecla was missed, and sought for by the
family and by Thamyris in every street, as though she
had been lost ; till one of the porter's fellow-servants
told them, that she had gone out in the night time.
Then they examined the porter, and he told them, that
she was gone to the prison to the strange man. They
went therefore according to his direction, and there
found her ; and when they came out, they got a mob
together, and went and told the governor all that hap-
pened. Upon which he ordered Paul to be brought
before his judgment-seat Thecla in the mean time
lay wallowing on the ground, in the prison, in that
same place where Paul had sat to teach her ; upon which
the governor also ordered her to be brought before
his judgmentseat ; which summons she received with
joy, and went When Paul was brought thither, the
mob with more vehemence cried out. He is a magi-
cian ; let him die. Nevertheless, the governor attend-
ed with pleasure upon Paul's discourses of the holy
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326 BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
works of Christ ; and, after a council called, he sum-
moned Thecla, and said to her, Why do you not, accord-
ing to the law of the Inconians, marry Thamyris ? She
stood still, with her eyes fixed upon Paul ; and finding
she made no reply, Theoclia her mother cried out, say-
ing, Let the unjust creature be burnt ; let her be burnt
in the midst of the theatre, for refusing Thamyris, that
all women may learn fi'om her to avoid such practices.
Then the governor was exceedingly concerned, and
ordered Paul to be whipped out of the city, and Thecla
to be burnt. So the governor arose, and went imme-
diately into the theatre ; and all the people went forth
to see the dismal sight. But Thecla^ just as a lamb in
the wilderness looks every way to see his shepherd,
looked around for Paul ; and as she was looking upon
the multitude, she saw the Lord Jesus in the likeness
of Paul, and said to herself, Paul is come to see me in
my distressed circumstances. And she fixed her eyes
upon him ; but he instantly ascended up to heaven,
while she looked on him. Then the young men and
women brought wood and straw for the burning of
Thecla ; who being brought naked to the stake, ex-
torted tears fi'om the governor, with surprise, at behold-
ing the greatness of her beauty. And when they had
placed the wood in order, the people commanded her
to go upon it ; which she did, first making the sign of
the cross. Then the people set fire to the pile ; though
the flame was exceeding large, it did not touch her ;
for God took compassion on her, and caused a great
eruption fi'om the earth beneath, and a cloud from
above to pour down great quantities of rain and hail,
insomuch that by the rupture of the earth, very many
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THE APOCRYPHAL ACTS. 327
were in great danger, and some were killed, the fire
was extinguished, and Thecla preserved-
ACTS OP ANDREW AND MATTHIAS IN THE CIIY OP THE
CANNIBAia
In some authorities the latter apostle is Matthew in-
stead of Matthias, tSiough the above title is the usual
one. With some the city of the cannibals is Sinope,
in Pontus of the Scythians, while others suppose it to
be Myrmene in Ethiopia. The book is ancient, but
not so old as the preceding ; and it exists in the man-
uscript and other authorities with very considerable
variations. The two oldest manuscripts used by Tisch-
endorf, are in Paris, and of the 11th and the 15th
century. There are also a few fragments in Paris in
the uncial letters, which Tischendorf and Thilo judge
to be as early as the 8th century.
The following brief analysis of the story will give
the reader a correct idea of the book, and enable him
to make an intelligible comparison between it and the
Acts in the New Testament
The twelve apostles were gathered together and as-
signed their different missionary fields by lot, and it
fell to Matthias to go to the country of the cannibala
Instead of bread and water, the cannibals ate the flesh
and drank the blood of strangers who visited their
coast They put out the eyes of these unhappy wan-
derers and gave them a bewitching draught, which
deprived them of their reason, so that they wandered
about eating hay and grass like cattle. Immediately
on the arrival of the man of God, they put him in
chains, destroyed his eyes, and gave him the bewitch-
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^8 THE BOOKS O? THE BIfiLE.
ing drink But he retained his reason and continued
to praise the Lord At night, in prison, he shed bit-
ter tears and oJSered earnest prayers to God. Sudden-
ly the prison was illuminated and a heavenly voice
assured him that he would soon be delivered from his
distress by Andrew, who would shortly visit his prison.
Every thirty days the heathen held a solemn assembly
in which they designated the prisoner who in his
turn would be served as a meal at their public table*
Matthias awaited with patience his approaching doom.
Meanwhile Andrew, who was preaching in Achaia^
received from heaven a command that he should iu
three days go to the city of the cannibals, where hi^
brother and companion was in danger. At first he
hesitated, it was a great distance and he did not know
the way ; but God commanded him to h^isten to the
sea-shore early the next morning. When Andrew and
his companions reached the shore at the appointed
time, he saw a skiff approaching manned with three
sailora These were Jesus the Almighty God, and two of
his angels, all disguised in human form like common
men, and Andrew, not knowing them, asked for a
passage. At first the boat-master declined unless he
was paid the passage money ; but when Andrew as-
sured him that he had neither money nor goods, but
was an apostle of the blessed Saviour, and was travel-
ling under his Master's directions, he and his associates
were received into the boat Andrew admired the
youthful beauty and handiness of the boat-master, who
directed his angels to refresh the poor pilgrims with
food. A severe storm arose, and the companions of
Andrew were afraid. The boat-master offered to set
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THE APOCRYPHAL ACTS. 329
them ashore, but they were ashamed to seek their own
safety and leave the apostle. Andrew comforted them
and reminded them that the blessed Savior had once
suddenly stilled a like violent tempest. They fell
asleep, the waves were calmed, and Andrew entered
into edifying conversation with the heavenly boat-
master. He asked of the apostle an accurate narrative
of the deeds and miracles of the Saviour. Andrew re-
lated how that Christ, when teased by the unbelieving
multitude for a miracle, conmianded the statues of the
Cherubim and Seraphim, which *were fixed on the
walls of the temple, to come down and go to Mamre,
and there call the three great patriarchs from their
graves ; and thus he gave them an irresistible proof of
his divine power. In such conversation the time
passed ; and at length Andrew, overcome with weari-
ness, fell asleep. In this condition God directed his
angels to bear him safely to the shore, where on awak-
ing the next morning he found himself in sight of the
prison of Matthias. His associates were also asleep
beside him, whom he aroused and informed them that
the man with whom they had sailed the day before,
could have been none other than the Supreme Being,
the Lord Jesus Christ Indeed, they answered, while
we were asleep, eagles came and took our souls and
bore them through the air to heaven ; and there we
heard an innumerable company of angels, with a thou-
sand voices, praising the Lord God, and we saw the
twelve apostles standing before the Son of God, and
the angels ministering to them.
Delighted with this vision, Andrew oflFered thanks-
giving to God, and besought pardon of the Creator,
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330 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
for all he had said the day before, without recognizing
the Almighty on board the boat. Then God again
made himself visible and spake peace to him, and said.
Thou wert guilty of a greater sin in Achaia, when thou
didst despond on account of the long distance and
the voyage by sea, for all things are possible with God.
But go up to the prison and deliver thy brother and hia
fellow prisoners. Then thy sorrows will begin, but
endure them steadfastly, and remember the torments
which I suffered on the cross. Invisibly then, for the
hand of God covered his steps, Andrew came up to
the prison. Seven sentries stood before the door, and
they suddenly fell dead. The door of itself sprang
open, the heathen were in a drunken sleep, and Mat-
thias sat alone in the murderer's den. The apostles
recognized and embraced and kissed each other, and
then knelt down and prayed. Matthias now without
delay proposed to leave the prison, he and two hun-
dred and forty others, whose way God concealed by a
cloud, so that no swift messenger of the enemy could
overtake them. Andrew attended them, and then
cheerfully returned to the city and sat down by a bra-
zen pillar to await what might happen.
Meanwhile the time of the heathen festival ap-
proached, and the heathen designed to bring out one
of the prisoners and devote him to death. But they
were disappointed. They found the prison open and
the sentries dead. The frightful tidings spread, and
hunger and terror took possession of the multitude. All
the citizens were called together and lots cast to de-
termine who should be slain, that his body might af-
ford food for the rest The lot fell upon a respectable
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THE APOCRYPHAL ACTS. 331
old man, whom they immediately bound- Lamenting
he offered them his young son instead, whom the hun-
gry multitude gladly accepted. Now the youth being
fettered, raised a bitter cry, and Andrew, who saw all
from his pillar, was inwardly moved by it. He prayed
to God for the innocent one, and was heard, for the
weapons which they directed against the boy melted
like wax. The boy was set free, but raging hunger
again began to be felt among the people.
Now the Devil, black and hateful, appeared in the
form of a miserable man, and betrayed the presence
of the saint, who had caused the prisoners to escape,
that against him all the wrath of the people might be
turned Andrew ridiculed the fiend, who only inflam-
ed the people the more. A divine voice directed the
apostle to come out from behind the pillar and show
himself to the people. His hands were now bound
and the multitude dragged him through the streets
and over stones and rocks all day till evening ; his
body was torn and trickled with blood, but his soul
was steadfast and believing. Andrew spent the night
in prison ; but early in the morning he is again beset,
and his tortures commence anew. The cries of the
sufferer ascend to heaven ; the Devil excites the multi-
tude more and more ; in the evening he comes with
six others to insult Andrew, but is driven off by the
sign of the cross.
On the third morning the tortures are again renew-
ed, and are continued through the day. Andrew
prays and longs for death, his blood is spread over the
ground, his hairs are scattered along the way. The
heavenly King directs him to look back, and he sees
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332 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
blossoming trees growing up in the places where the
drops of blood had £allen ; and when the enemies had
for the fourth time brought the saint back to his prison,
God drew near and greeted him and gave strength
and soundness to his wounded body as at the begin-
ning.
Now he noticed by the wall two large weather-
stained stone pillars, and one of them he thus ad-
dressed : It is the will of God, the Almighty, that
streams should pour forth from thee among the heathen
people. Thou art resplendent with gold, and in an-
cient times the Lord was pleased to write on thee his
ten commandments ; but to-day there is reserved for
thee a still greater honor, for thou shalt proclaim the
counsel of God. Scarcely had the saint uttered these
words, when the stone was rent, and endless floods of
water wpre poured forth from it, which increased to a
mighty river. Many children were drowned and the
men tried to flee to the mountains ; but an angel with
a flaming sword stopped the way, the waves increased,
the wilderness howled, and fire-brands flew about
There was a universal yell of grief and terror ; and at
length one cried aloud. You see now for yourselves
that we have laid the innoce/it stranger in chains ;
therefore a frightful punishment awaits us ; hurry, let
us unchain him and beg of him for help. They has-
tened to unbind him, but the water still increased, and
the flood became so great that it reached to the neck
and shoulders of the men. But Andrew addressed
the water-flood, and the heavens became fair, and the
earth opened its mouth and drank in the waters.
Fourteen of the worst men were drawn into the abyss
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THE APOCRYPHAL ACTS. 333
and disappeared from the earth. All the people trem-
bled for fear and acknowledged that God had sent this
holy man. Andrew warned and exhorted, and uttered
a prayer for the souls of the children who had found
death in the flood. The prayer was acceptable to the
Most High. He ordered that they should rise from
the dead ; and as soon as they had returned to life
they were baptized and received under the divine pro-
tection. In the place where the flood sprung up and
baptism was administered, Andrew caused a church to
be built ; and from all places men and women were
assembled and were baptized and renounced the service
of the Devil an^ the heathen altars. Afterwards An-
drew appointed a pious bishop over them by the name
of Plato, and longed himself to leave the country and
go over the sea. All were grieved that he would de-
depart from them so soon, and a voice from heaven
warned him that he should remain yet seven days
longer with his new flock and confirm their faith. So
long did he teach and strengthen them, to the disgust
of the Devil, who saw all these people delivered from
hell. At the expiration of the appointed time, An-
drew prepared himself for his journey, the people
accompanied him with sadness to the shore, looked
after the ship so long as their eyes could follow it, and
praised the eternal God.
The above extract is modeled on the argument to
an old Anglo-Saxon poem published by J. Grimm,
which gives a very good general idea of the book.
The book itself is quite too long to be inserted here,
and in this case an abstract is better than extracts.
In this poem it is throughout Matthew who wrote the
Gospel, that is the associate of Andrew.
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334 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Here we have a fair example of the best of the
Acts of the Apostles out of the New Testament la
not the difference quite as great and of the same kind
as that which we have already shown to exist between
the apocrjrphal gospels and the canonical ? Would it
not be an insult to the common sense of the reader
even to propose to him the question seriouslj whether
the two classes of books could have proceeded from
the same source ? The apocryphal Acts were among
the best products of the human mind of that period
and among the people who were nominally Christian^
and the canonical Acts, as the contrast shows, must
have been from the divine and not the human mind
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CHAPTER TENTH.
THE FOURTEEN EPIBTLBB OF PAUL.
The following is the chronological order in which
the epistles of Paul were written : Thessalonians I. and
II., Galatians, Corinthians I. and 11. , Romans, Ephe-
sians, Colossians, Philemon, Philippians, Hebrews, I.
Timothy, Titus, II. Timothy.
As this book is written for those who use the com-
mon editions of the Greek Testament, and the com*
mon translations, it will be more convenient for the
reader that we follow the usual arrangement
EPISTLE TO THE BOICANB.
That this epistle is a genuine production of the
apostle Paul, is susceptible of the most satisfactory
proof, and the fact has seldom been seriously called in
question. The objections of the Englishman Evanson,
published about a century since, never made much im-
pression and they have been abundantly refuted. ' The
testimony of the early Christian writers is full and
unanimous. We have direct testimony from Ireneeus
(adv. Haer. III. xvi 3), Tertullian (de Cor. Mil. c. 6,
adv. Prax. c. 13), Clemens Alex. (Paed. i. p. 117,
Strom, iiL 457), Origen, who wrote a commentary on
this epistle, etc., eta The indirect testimony also of
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336 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
quotations and allusions is equally copious and reliable,
e. g. Clemens Rom. (Ep. i. ad Cor. ii. 35), Polycarp
(ad Phil. c. 6), Theophilus of Antioch (ad Autol. ii.
p. 99 ; iii. p. 18), the letter of the churches of Vienne
and Lyons, quoted by Eusebius (E. H. v. 1), and many
others. (Compare Guericke, New Test. Isagog. p.
329-30.) The internal evidence is no less clear and
explicit See Paley's Horee Paulinae chap, i., iL
But why did the apostle write to the Romans in the
Greek language? Why did he not write in Latin?
The members of the church at Rome were not exclu-
sively or principally natives of Rome or even of Italy.
The population of Rome at that time was composed
of persons from every part of the Roman empire, from
every nation under heaven, and with them Greek was
the common language of social intercourse, business and
literature. The native Romans themselves neglected
their own language and used Greek. Tacitus de Or.
c. 29 ; Martial, Epig. xiv. 56 ; Juvenal, Lat. vi. 184-9.
Authors, Christian, Jewish and Pagan, living at
Rome, composed their works in Greek, as Clement,
Justin Martyr, Josephus, Plutarch, Epictetus, the em-
peror Marcus Aurelius (see Tholuck and Alford on
Romans) ; and among the common people, with whom
the Christians would generally be found, the predomi-
nant language was Greek. Juvenal, Sat iil 60-^0.
If Paul then wished to be understood by the great
body of the church members at Rome, it was necessa-
ry that he should write in Greek rather than Latin.
The epistle was written at Corinth, probably during
the winter of A. D. 57-58. Paul had then been a
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THS FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 337
preacher of the Gospel twenty-eight years. A part
of the summer A. D. 57 he had spent in Ephesus, the
remainder of the summer and the autumn in Macedo-
nia ; and he was passing the three winter months at
Corinth, whence he was about to make a journey to
Jerusalem, with the contributions to the saints, in the
spring. Acts xx. 2, 3 ; 1 Cor. xv. 25, xvi 6.
Phoebe, a deaconess of the church at Cenchrea, the
eastern seaport of Corinth, had occasion to go to Rome
on business, and the apostle took the opportunity to
send a letter by her to the important church there,
though he had himself then never visited that city.
Compare Acts xix. 21, xx. 1, 2, 6 ; Rom. xv. 24, 28,
xiv. 1, 21, 23 ; 1 Cor. i 14. Among the members
of the church at Rome were some of Paul's relatives
(Rom. xvi 7), and some of his intimate friends, with
whom he had been acquainted before their residence
in Rome. He speaks of Rufus in particular, and
sends salutation to the mother of Rufus as his own
mother (Rom. xvi. 13). Was this Rufus the son of
Simon the Cyrenian (Mark xv. 21), who bore the cross
of Jesus? And was Paul an inmate of that family
while he studied at Jerusalem ?
Among the persons converted at Jerusalem during
the first pentecost after our Lord's ascension, are men-
tioned acQouming Romans (Acts ii 10), and among
the distinguished teachers of that church, Paul men-
tions some of his own kinsmen (Rom. xvi. 7) who
were Christians before he waa It is probable, then,
that the first foundations of the Roman church were
laid by Jewish Christians who had been converted by
the preaching of Peter. The statements in the book
22
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33.8 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLI^.
of Actg[ mftke it impossible for us to believe that either
Paul ox Peter weye at Rom^, dujing ihe ^arly period
of the exi^te^ace pf thfi,t churclL We may, how-
ever, without h^s^tation admit the historical fact that,
thej we«e both ther^ during the latter part of their
lives, though probably their stay was but brief, Paul's
first visit b^ing about Ijwo yeafs, and his second a much
sJpLorter time, and Peter'9 ^hole stay scarcely exceed-
ing om year. It is not likely that Qithex a,postle ever
hold my ofiScial connection with that particular church
(Alfoifd, Proleg. to Rom. s^c. 2). Paul's, own state-
ments show that he had not been at Rome when he
wrote thi^ epistle (Rom. i 10, 13, 15, xv* 23), and we
have ti^e testimony of Origen that Petjer did not come
to Rome til) quite the latter part of his life (Euseb. B.
H. iil 1), and there is no testimony* in t^e Bible or in
Christia,n antiquity to the contrary effect in regard to
either. All the probabilities 8J?e decidedly in favor
of the conclusion above stated.
Itj is obvious enough firom the very- nature of the
case, an4 perfectly certaia from the contents of the
epistle, that the church at Rome wa^ viade up of both,
Jewish and Gentile Christians. Chap, il 1»7, iii. 19, iv.
1, 12, vii 1-4 ix, xi, plainly h^,ve reference, to Jews;
whil^ i, 1.6-32, vL 1,7, i^.^, 30, xi. 13-^5, 28, 30, xiv.
1, XV. 14, as plainly refi?r to Gentile Perhaps it
woujjd no|; be ea^y to come to any certw conclusion
ap tp the relative strength of these twOv Qomponent
parts. p£ the churc^ ; yet from some passages, a^ i 5,
6, 13, XV. 16, ¥fe luigllt i^fer that the Gentile part
was the more, po^erM ai^d influential
The epistle, unlike the others we ha(VQ from Paul,
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OP PAUL. 339
except that to the Ephebians^ was not called forth by
any partix^ulaF exigency in the chnrch, nor is it de-
signed to meet any peculiar circumstances On this
accQunt ite discussions stand on a broader ba^is and its
topics, are of a more general character, than those of
the ojthe? epistles^ with the exception already men-
tioned In consequence of this general dogmatic
character of the book, it occupies the first place in
almost all manuscripts and printed editions of the
epistles, though not by any means the first written in
the order of time ; the two to the Thessalonians, that
to thq Galatiana, and the two to the Corinthians,
having all preceded it, making the Romans the sixth
instead of the first The epistles would be much bet-
ter understood if read in the order in which they were
written,, as they are arranged by Connybeare and
Howson, a^d by Wordsworth, than as they stand in the
common editions of the Testamei^t.
It is the general object of the epistle to point out
ta both Jewish and Gentile Christians the peculiar mis-
^kes to which they were each liable, in consequence
of pr.^*udices: of education, position and habits, and to
lay open before them the true theory and practice of
the Christian religion. Afitar a general introduction,
i. 1-15,. he makes, a st^Uiement of his subject, namely,
tbiub the Gospel of Christ is the power of God to sal-
vation for both Jqw wd Gentile, and that entirely
thxongh th^' ju9tificatioa and righteousness which is by
fiaith (i 16i) 17). That such a method of salvation is
needed by the Gentiles is plain fix>m their well known
and enormous wickedness (i 18-^2.) That the Jews
also equally n/eed the same method of salvation is plain.
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340 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
because, though they have higher knowledge and bet-
ter principles than the Gentiles, their character is
equally bad if not worse ; and God judges of men ex-
actly by what they are and what they do, and not by
what they have and what they profess, ii : 1-29. He
then answers some objections to this statement, which
might arise in the Jewish mind in consequence of the
covenant relation of the Jewish nation to God, and
the promises made to the fathers, iii : 1-20. He then
sets forth the nature of that justification by faith,
which is the basis of his instructions, iii: 21-31. He
next insists that this method of justification is not new
or peculiar to the Gospel, that Abraham himself was
justified by faith, iv : 1-4, that David also distinctly
recognizes the doctrine, iv: 6-8, that Abraham re-
ceived justification by faith before he was circumcised
iv: 9-12, and before the law was given iv: 13-15,
therefore the Jews who have both circumcision and the
law, cannot be justified unless they have Abraham's
faith also, and the Gentiles, who have neither circum-
cision nor the law, may be justified without either if
they but have the faith of Abraham, iv: 16, 17, and
then follows an exhibition of the nature and strength
of Abraham's faith, iv: 18, 22, and an application of
the whole to the subject in hand, iv : 23-25. Next
the advantages of this justification by faith, peace with
God and confidence .in his love, v: 1-11 ; and a con-
trast between what we have lost by Adam and what
we may gain by Christ, showing the latter to be im-
measurably the greater, v: 12-21.
Thus far the subject of judtification^ — ^now comes
that of sanctijkation. This doctrine of justification
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 341
does not give license to sin, for Ist the very nature of
our relation to Christ forbids us to sin, vi : 1, 14 ; 2d,
the different wages of the two services, stn and righ-
teousneas^ should bring us entirely into the service of
the latter, vi : 15, 23 ; and 3d, being now dead to the
law and united to Christ, instead of our old ineffectual
struggle against sin, we have in Christ an inward prin-
ciple of love which leads to a willing obedience, vii :
1, 6. Further to illustrate the same topic, he takes
the most favorable case which can possibly arise under
the law, that of a man approving and loving the law
and sincerely desiring to become holy by it, but with-
out Christ living in a fruitless struggle and baffled in
every endeavor, vii : 7-25. In Christ and Christ alone
sin is overcome and sanctification attained, viii: 1-17.
So far then from the doctrine of justification by faith
giving license to sin, it is the only principle which can
possibly lead men to holiness. There is the lawless
state of men, vii : 9 ; the legal state, vii : 5, vii : 7-25,
and the glorious apiritaal state, vii: 6, viii: 1-17, and
this last is obtained by the Gospel and the Gospel
only ; and the fundamental principle of the Gospel is
justification by faith alone, apart from the deeds of the
law, iii: 20,28.
The glorious consummation of the completed work
of redemption, extending as widely as the ruins of the
fall have extended, is then described, viii: 18-39.
But if the preceding be true, many of the descend-
ants of Abraham fall out of their covenant relations
with God. He admits it ix : 1-5, but affirms that this
is nothing new, ix : 6, 7, the same has happened often
before as he shows in the case of Ishmael ix: 8, 9, and
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342 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Esauix: 10, 13. God confers special favors, accord-
ing to his awn sovereign will, as he shows in the case
of Moses ix: 14-16, and tshooses his own time, and
manner of pnnishing transgressors, as he shows in th^
case of Pharaoh ix: 17 ; in all such matters he acts
entirely as a sovereign, and with entire justice and
mercy ix : 18-24 ; and moreover the ancient Hebrew
prophets had themselves expressly predicted that the
time would come when many Gentiles und compara-
tively few Jews would be in covenant relation with
God, ix ; 25-33. The cause of all this is entirely the
unbelief of the Jews and nothing else, x : 1-13, and
their inexcusable unbelief, for they had had abundant
opportunity both to hear and accept the Gospel, x :
14-1^8, as Moses and Isaiah had before announced
would be the case, x : 19-21. But the time would
come when Israel would repent and be restored to all
his covenant privileges, xi: 1-16 ; the Gentiles, there-
fore, were not to boast, or despise the Jews, but to be
humble and loving, xi : 17-32 ; and then he breaks forth
into a rapturous strain of praise to God for his marvel-
lous wisdom and goodness, xi: 33-36. Thus closes
the dogmatic part of this most wonderful episde, and
then follows the practical or hortatory part, xii.-— xv.
and the eminently social and sociable conclusion, xvi.
BTTLS. OF THE EPiStLE.
The style of Paul is altogether peculiar. Nothing
like it, I believe, can be found out of the New Testa-
ment. It is the style of a Jewish Rabbi rather than
of a classical Greek writer ; but of a Rabbi of a very
peculiar cast of character. His style is the natural
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THE F0u4lT*lfiiJ itlSTI^faA oi* t»A.UL. 34^
outgrowth of thfeie elements, tb Irit, thfe fii^y impetu-
osity of his own nature, his tlioiy)ugli «nd strictly
Jewish educi^on, tod the chftracteristic piecularities of
the Ohrisfekm theology "(irhich he inculcated. All the
tharacterifitiel ^of his Btyle culminate in the epistle to
the Romalik fie cannot be called a persptcuotis writer^
but he is never ^Hnxial He is either understood or
not understood — seld^m^ by the careful student, who
fmalyses hih owh thoughts, mtsundefstood. He abounds
in imperfect 'parentheses, that is, sentences which in-
tempt ihe flow of thought, and yet are so essential to
the subsequent tegument that they cannot be omitted ;
and he is full of tho^ rhetdiicad iir^gtilaritifes which
the Greeks designate by the hard names of anantopod-
frion and mnkdeol&uffhn. He frequently uses an imper-
fect kind of entithesis, a sott of philological equation,
of which the two. sides are not always by atiy means
^ual as they «iaiid, aUd the equtditing Inust be made
by the reader, guided by the purpose said context of
the sentence He &o isolates himself in a partictdar
tc^ic on hand, that often he Btates univeraally that
which is Htnb "only with limitations ; and he useis prep-
ositions with gl*eat pfofusenefes and a Wide latitudci.
His mind had been so thoroughly imbued With the
forms of Hfeb^eW thought^ ibM, a knowledge of the
Hebrew language is almost vJi es^ntial to the intelli-
gent study of his writings, as k knowledge of the
Greek. He darts with inconceivable rapidity from
thought to thought, «o that one liiust be assiduously
on the watch to keep hiiii in sight. Hfe gives himself
no time to ekp^ess one thought fully, before he hur-
ries on to ariother; and -multittides di ideas are strug-
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gling in his soul for a simultaneous utterance. Yet his
sentences can be disintegrated and his meaning ascer-
tained— ^and when once he is fairly unravelled, his
thought comes out, not only with perfect explicitness,
but with warmth the most genial and eloquence un-
surpassed. No study can be more profitable as a dis-
ciplinary exercise, whether mental, ethical, or religious,
than the writings of the apostle Paul.
The witnesses for the epistle to the Romans are
Clement of Rome, Ignatius, Polycarp, Justin Martyr,
Letter to Diognetus, Churches of Vienne and Lyons,
Irenaeus, Tatian, Athenagoras, Theophilus, Clement of
Alexandria, TetuUian, Origin, Eusebius, Jerome, Au-
gustin.
Clement of Rome. Hateful to God, not only those
who do these things, but those who have pleasure in
them, i: 23.
Ignatius. * Of the race of David according to the
flesh, son of man and son of God,' i : 9.
Polycarp. * We must all stand before the judgment
seat of Christ, and each give account of himself. ' xiv : 1 0.
Justin Martyr. 'For all have gone out of the way,
he cries out, they have together become corrupt,' etc.,
iii: 11-17.
Irena£U8. * The Apostle Paul writing to the Romans,
Paul an apostle of Jesus Christ, set apart for the Gos-
pel of God,' etc., i: 1.
Again writing to the Romans concerning Israel, he
says, whose are the fathers, and of whom as to the
flesh Christ came,' etc., ix : 5.
Tlieophilua. 'By patient continuance in well doing
seek for glory, honor and immortality, etc., ii: 6-9.
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OP PAUL. 345
And he teaches to render all things to all, honor to
whom honor, fear to whom fear,' etc., xiii: 7, 8.
Church of Yienne and Lyons. 'They hastened to
Christ, showing in reality that the sufferings of this
time are not to be compared with the glory that shall
be revealed to us.' viii: 18.
Clement of Alexandria. ' Behold says Paul the good-
ness and severity of God,' xi: 22. * Likewise also
Paul in the epistle to the Romans writes, we who are
dead to sin, how shall we live any longer in it ?' vi : 2.
Tertullian. ' But I shall be able to call Christ alone
God, as the same apostle says, Of whom Christ, who
is God over all blessed forever.' ix: 4 * Writing to
the Romans, Gentiles by nature doing the things which
are of the law.' ii: 14. 'As also Paul says to the
Romans, and not only so, but we glory in tribulations
also,' etc. v: 3-5.
Atheruifforas. 'Why should I care for sacrifices and
holocausts of which God has no need ? He requires
bloodless victims and a reasonable service.' Rom. xii:
1, Legat p. 13.
Theophilua. ' Upon them will come indignation and
wrath, tribulation and anguish.' (Rom. ii. 6). ad Au-
toL, p. 79.
'Divine wisdom requires that we should render to
all their dues, honor to whom honor, fear to whom
fear, tribute to whom tribute ; and that we should owe
no man anything, but to love one another.' (Rom. xiii:
7, 8). ad Autol., p. 126.
Clement of Alexandria. 'Behold therefore, says
Paul, the goodness and severity of God ; on those who
fall severity, but to thee goodness, if thou continue in
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liisgoodh*% that is, faith toirard Chriflt' (Rom. xi:
22). Bftea., p. il7.
'Likewi% also Paul in his epistle to the Romans,
Writes : Hofir steill Vre who are dead to sin, live any
longe): thesn&bi ? Seeing that oui- old man is crucified,
that the body of sin may by destroyed, Hei-
thet .yield y^ your taiemb^rs the instruments of un-
righteouisnete to iniquity.' (Roih. vi: 2, J 3). StrouL iii
ShtuUttin. ^ Ab also Paul to the Romans, saying th«
Geblfles by feature do the things 6f the laW.' (Roih. ii:
14. tie C<*bh., 2, 6).
* As also ^0 the Roifaalns Paul says. And not only so,
btit We glofy in tribulatioli also, knowing that tribulu-
ktion Woi*keth patience, and patience experience, and
&^€^ence hop6, and hope Inaketh not ashamed.^
(Rom. v: 8^6). ScorpL, 2, 13.
Misebtits. *The epistles of Paul are fourteen, all
Wen ktiowii *tfid beyond doubt'
^The sai^e kpostle in the kddresses at the close oi
the epistle to the Romans (xvi : 14), has among othel»
made mention also of Hermas,' etc.
Athen^ora». *Why sacrifice to me, of which God
hias no need ^ It is needful to offer the bloodless vie*
tim, and to bring forward the reasonable service.^ xii: 1*
Tattan. 'This God We know from his acts, and ac-
knowledge thfe invisible things of his power ifrom what
he has mkde.' i: ^.
ifo book wa& eV€fr better attested by unimpeachable
witnesses, than Paul's epistle to the Romans.
The te&thdfotiy is so Constant, uninterrupted, abtin-
datii and u&di^uted, tiiat thete Scarcely seems a neces-
sity for quoting more.
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THE rOUllTE«N fiPISTLBS OP PAUL. 347
iFor the remaining ejiistleb of Paul, my principal
guides and atltfaofitias are Gnei^idce and De Wette^ tlie
gnpelmatTirali^t and the tationalidt Theee tWo appear
to me to haVfe if^tte^i, each trotn. h'fcX)Wn particular
point of Vie^, the inost accniut^ and comfdete intro«-
dtictions to thesfe epistleb, that have yet been pub-
lished. De Wette is 1>y hb i&eaxvB am -extrelne ratiour
alist He had no syiilipathy 1rl]gaiteve^ ^th the ex-
travagancies of Sttaute, *ind hbd a teal reverence for
llie Scriptures and for the Lotd JesUfi. He Iras rather
* fisivorite author of the lat^ ^heodote Patbsr, who
translated into Engli^ iifid published his Introduction
to the Old Testament Gueridke is afa old-fashioned
t^M^hodo^ Lutheran of the Most uufexceptionable typa
wiwiM TO Vb!r oottiln*fiiAlrd, first jSxd isbgond.
Paul eame to Corinth on his secohd tnissionary jouiv
hey, in tlie ye^ 6S or 54, ^nd remamed thet^e a year
ttud a half. It #as a rich <x)]ftimerciad city^ specialljr
^efvoted to the worship xff Veiiitt, tjoatupt and luxuv
rious to a high degree even for a pagan orty, yet dis-
tinguii^hed also for lettrntog «nd eloquewce. The pro-
iionsul Gallio was quite indifferent to the movements
of Paul, who supporting him&elf by tent-iiiaking in thb
establishment of Prisoilla and Aquila, aealotsly preach-
ed the Gospel with much opposition and disturbance,
but also with great success. A^tsxviii: 1-18. While
Paul was on his missioti«fy journey thlrough Phrygia
and Galatia, Apollos, a learned and ^loqtient Jew of
Alexandria, who had been Instructed by Priscilla and
Aquila at Ephesuft, (Acts xviii: 24-28), preadied with
great acceptance at Oorinth; and at 'the same time
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348 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Judaizing teachers from Jerusalem were there, who
manifested bitter hostility to Paul and caused dissen-
sions in the church (Acts xviii. 24-28, 1 Cor. ix. 2,
2 Cor. iii. 1, v. 12, xL 4, 18, 22, xii. 11). To these troub-
les were added painful cases of immorality, occasioned
by the gross corruptions of paganism still adhering to
the recent Christian converts (1 Cor. v. 9.)
Such was the state of things at Corinth when Paul
came to Ephesus from Galatia in the year 56. He re-
ceived information of the unhappy circumstances by
persons from the family of Chloe (1 Cor. i 11), and
also by others sent specially to him by the Corinthians
(1 Cor. xvi. 17 ff.). He accordingly sent Timothy to
them (1 Cor. iv. 17), and afterwards this letter, appro-
priate not only to "the Corinthians, but designed also
(as was also the second letter) for all Christians in like
circumstances (1 Cor. i. 2 ; 2 Cor. i 1). He first re-
proves them for their dissensions, then rebukes their
immoralities and want of discipline, and afterwards
corrects their false doctrines especially in regard to the
resurrection.
From Ephesus Paul passed into Macedonia, learned
something of the effect produced by his first letter
from Titus (1 Cor. ii. 12, vii. v. 5-10), and then wrote
his second letter to correct and deepen the impressions
produced by the first. Both the letters are of a
miscellaneous character, not admitting of the rigid sys-
tematic analysis which can with so much advantage be
applied to the epistle to the Romans ; but they are won-
derfully eloquent, full of the most tender Christian
feeling and practical wisdom, and admirably adapted
to the instruction of Christian churches in all ages and
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL 349
nations, and especially to vindicate his own claims to
the genuine apostleship, which it would seem his ene-
mies had called in question.
We may, however, give the following analysis (De
Wette, p. 205) of the course of thought.
1. Opposition to the formation of parties in the
church and a defence of his own simple method of
preaching the Gospel (i.-iv.). 2. Opposition to the
improper connection of one of the members of the
church with his step-mother, and warnings against
licentious indulgence (v.). 3. Against Christians go-
ing to law with their fellow Christians before the pagan
courts, and more warnings against licentiousness (vi.),
4. Answer to the question respecting celibacy (vii.).
5. Instructions as to the proper course to be pursued
by Christians in regard to heathen sacrifices, and a
statement of his own principles and conduct in such
matters (viii.-xi.). 6. Reproof of some unbecoming
practices in the church in regard to the presence of
females at worship with their heads unveiled, and of
great disorders at the celebration of the Lord's sup-
per (xi.). 7. Instructions in respect to spiritual gifts, and
the paramount obligations of Christian love (xii-xiv.).
8. The doctrine of the resurrection of the dead (xv.).
9. Directions in respect to almsgiving, and closing
salutations (xvi).
When Paul wrote the second epistle to the Corin-
thians he had already escaped from the dangers at
Ephesus (2 Cor. i. 2 ; Acts xix. 23), and was now in
Macedonia in company with Timothy (2 Cor. i. 1, 2, ii.
13, vii. 5, ix. 2 ; Acts, xx. 1) ; and there could have
been but a short time between the writing of the first
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Qpistle aad, tlie second This second epistle was prob-^
Q.bly wntten in Mapedonia n^ar the close of A. D. 58^
or the beginning of 59. It was occasioned by IjbQ
extreniQ anziety which the apostle felt in regard to
the effect whicib might have be^n prodnped by his fir^t
epistle (2 Cor. ii 4, vii 5 ff.). The influence had been
for the mo9t part good (2 Cor. ii fe-ll, yii. 8-13, ix. 2.\
but the object of the writer had not yet been fully a<s
qomplished (2 Coip. vi. 14-18, 3cU, 20, 21, xiii. 11) ; hia
^versQries had even taken occasion fron^ it to speak,
of him with contempt (2 Cor. i 15-17, iii 1, 3^ 9 ff ),
so that, he i^ obliged to wco^i^ the^.of! &(eyerer measures
which h^ will t^keif uecessary. He>^iso exhorts them^
to make a, collection for the poor. Titus with two
brethren i^ seAt to. take chq^rge of the collection and
the delivery of the epistle (2 Cor., viii 6-23, ix.
3r-5) ; and the apostle, hini^lf proposes soon tQ. follow
(2 Cor. i?- 4, Xf 11, xMf l)r which he afterwards did
(Acts 33; 2,)..
The epistle ia naturally divided injto. 3^ pftFtip, 1. The
expres^oqi of hia an;:aetlea occasioned by the troubles
^i Ephesiu3^ wd tJie^ iAtelligen^e he h^ received frantk
Corinth (L-vii). 2. IJireptipns in i>^ard to the coU
lection^ tpi be m94e £or the poor sfi^nt^ at Jerusa^eioc
(yiil-ix.),. 3* ^aFiiest es;hprtationaapd waj^nings, an^
the necessary vindication of himself (x,-T.xiii,),
The witnesses for these two. epistles are Clement, of
Ilome, HevmAS^ Ignajt^us, Polycacp, the chwehat Smyr-
na, Justin Martyr, X-etter to Diognetus^ Ireniapss, Tatian,,
AthenagoraSi Theophilus, Clement of AJes»»ndria, Ter-
tullian, Origep, Jerome, A^^ustin, etp. Thei testimony
i^ remai:kably fuJl v^d complete, and. very few have^
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OP P-^iUL. 9l5X
ever pretended to ijpipeach either the external or
the inteirnad ^^idenqe of the ge^ui^e^e9s- of tibtese
epistles.
Clement of Borne, vritiog to tjie same Corinthians,
myu^ ^^ 7ake th^. epistle of the blessed apostle Paul.
Certainly in the Spirit he sent letters to you, concem-
iiPg^ hii^se^ «nd Cepl^as a^^d ApoUos because you were
t)ij^ al diwgreement'* 1 Cor. i* 11-13* " Let us con-
^ider^j li)elQyed, how; llie Lord demonstrates to us per-,
petually the future resurrection, of which he made the
Lord Jesvs Chrirt t^ first, fiwtei when hQ raised him
from the dead."
jPolifcarp, ^^Know we not that the saints will judge
th« worldly So Paiul teachea" 1 Cor. yL 2.
Jrencmi^ ^^^AvA this the apostle in the epistle which
is to the Corinthians xaost plainly shows, sct3ring, I
would not that ye should be ignorant, brethren, that
aJl QjiiT^ fathers, were under the cloud" 1 Cor% x 1 £
'* 5ut wh^ they say, Paul has openly said in the. sec-
Q9di to t^e Corinthians^ in whom the god of this, world
hath bU^d^d^ the. mimdis of them that believe not"
i Cor, iy. 4
40ifinffgor>(m " Tlu^ corruptible and dissipated nnist
p^ti on iqicorruption." 1 Gort xy. Ssi. '^Eagh one will
receive 4, jnst sentence, according to what he hath
dQP^.i^ th^ body, whether it be ^ood w bad," 2 Cor.
v; 10.
L^t^> tQ Dtpgfketua, ^' The apostle says, knowledge
ynfE^thi up b»t Qhairity ed^th«" 1 Cor. iii 1.
Clement of Alexandrict- " The blessed Paul in4he
%sti.e^ij3tle to thj^ CorinthianSi . . . writings Brethren,
be not children in updprsteflding.'* etc. 1 Con 3^iv. 20,
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352 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
" The apostle said in the second to the Corinthians, for
to this day the same veil remains in the reading of the
Old Testament." 2 Cor. iii 14
Tertullian. "Panl in the first to the Corinthians
mentions the deniers and doubters of the resur-
rection."
The references are so full and explicit, that it can
not be deemed necessary to multiply quotationa We
add a few which refer more particularly to the second
epistle.
Polycarp^ ad Philip, c. 2. " He that raised up Jesus
from the dead, will raise us up also if we do his will."
2 Cor. iv. 14, also ii. 6. Providing for things honest
both in the sight of God and man." 2 Cor. iv. 14,
also ii. 4. " Let us arm ourselves with the weapons
of righteousness." 2 Cor. vi. 7.
Clement of Borne. Ep. i. ad Cor. c. 30. " Let our
praise be from God and not from ourselves." 2 Cor. x.
17, 18, also, c. 5. "Through zeal Paul received the
reward of endurance, when he was many times in
chains, was beaten, was stoned," etc. 2 Cor. xi. 24
Irenaeus^ Haer, iii. 7. "Paul openly spake in
the second to the Corinthians, in whom the god of this
world hath blinded the minds of them that believe
not" 2 Cor. iv. 4, also iv. 28. "For also the apostle
says in the second epistle to the Corinthians, ' For we
are unto God a sweet savor of Christ, both in them
that are saved and in them that perish ; to some in-
deed a savor of death unto death, to some a savor of
life unto life.' " 2 Cor. iL 15, 16.
TheopMlvs^ ad Autol. iii " You suffer fools gladly
when you are wise." 2 Cor. xL 19.
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 353
Clement of Alexandria. Strom, iv. " The apostle
speaks of the savor of knowledge in the second epistle
to the Corinthians." 2 Cor. ii. 14.
Tertullian. De Pud. c. 13. "They really suppose
that Paul in the second epistle to the Corinthians gives
pardon to* the same fornicator, whom in his first epistle
he had directed to be delivered to Satan for the de-
struction of the flesh." 2 Cor. il 6-11.
Epistle to Diognetus, "They are in the flesh but
live not according to the flesh." " They are poor, yet
make many rich." "They have nothing, yet they
abound in all things." " They are cursed and they
bless." " They are spitefully treated and they honor."
"Doing good, they are punished as evil." "When
they are punished they rejoice as those who are made
alive." 2 Cor. x. 3-10
EPISTLE TO THE GALATLiNS.
Galatia or GallograBcia was a small territory of Asia
Minor, bounded by Paphlagonia, Cappadocia, Bithynia,
Phrygia and Lycaonia. It was occupied by Celtic or
German emigrants about the year 250 B. C, and
Jerome informs us that they retained in some measure
their German speech to a very late period. It was
subjugated by the Romans in the year 188 B. C, and
became a Roman province in the year 26. There
were Jews in the province, especially in the commer-
cial cities, where they had enjoyed the special protec-
tion of the emperor Augustus.
Paul was the foxmder of the churches there (Gal. i.
3, iv. 13, 19). He made two missionary journeys
23
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354 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
among the Galatians (Acts xvi. 6, xviii. 23). They
were a strong, rough, impulsive people, and the
churches consisted mainly, though not entirely, of Gen-
tUes (Gal. iv. 8, v. 2, vi. 12).
After Paul's departure Judaizing teachers had come
among the Galatians (Acts xv. i. 5, Gal. ii. 12), who un-
derrated the character and labors of Paul (i. 1, 11), dis-
puted his doctrine and insisted upon the necessity of
circumcision and a compliance with the Jewish laws
(Gal. V. 2 ff. 11 ff), so that the people were very much
disturbed and misled (Gal. i. 6, iii. 1, iv. 9-21, v. 3 flF.).
It was these disturbances and perversions which gave
occasion to Paul's epistle. The epistle was written
either at Troy or Corinth (Acts xvi. 3, xviii. 11), the
time not quite certain, but about the year 55 or 56
after Christ. Contrary to his usual custom he wrote
the epistle with his own hand without the assistance
of an amanuensis (Gal. vi. 11).
The epistle may be arranged in two divisions.
1. The apostle's assertion of his own authority and
dignity as a teacher of Christianity (i. ii.). 2. A denial
of the necessity of the Mosaic law, and a vindication
of the glorious freedom of the Gospel (iii.-v.), and an
exhortation that this freedom should not be abused to
licentiousness, concluding with ethical precepts and
warnings (vi.). The genuineness of the epistle has
never been seriously questioned, and it is perfectly
well sustained both by internal evidence and external
testimony.
Witnesses for Galatians. Clement of Rome, Igna-
tius, Polycarp, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Tatian, Athe-
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 355
nagoras, Clement of Alexandria, TertuUian, Eusebius,
Jerome, Augustin.
Specdmena of Testimony. Irenaetis. "And again in
the epistle which is to the Galatians Paul says, But
when the fullness of time had come God sent his Son,
made of a woman, made under the law," etc. Gal. iv.
4, 5. *'But also the apostle Paul saying. For if ye
served those who were not gods, but now knowing
God, nay being known by God." Gal. iv. 3, 9. But
also in that which is to the Galatians, he speaks thus,
What then is the law of works ? It was added until
the seed should come," etc. Gal. iii. 19.
Clement of Alexandria. "Wherefore Paul, also,
writing to the Galatians says. My little children, of
whom I travail in birth again till Christ be formed in
you.
TertvlUan. " We also confess then the principal epis-
tle against Judaism which teaches the Galatians."
" But of this no more, if it be the same Paul, who
also in another place enumerates heresies among the
works of the flesh, writing to the Galatians."
JusHn Martyr. "Be as I am, for I am as ye are."
Gal. iv. 12.
Clement of Rome. " Who gave himself for our sins,
according to the will of God and our Father." Gal. i. 4.
Ignatius. " An apostle not of men nor by men,
but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised
him from the dead." Gal. i. 1. Christ is become of no
effect unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the
law." Gal. V. 4
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THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESLiNS.
The relations of the apostle Paul to the church at
Ephesus were peculiarly tender and interesting. The
19 th and 20th chapters of the book of Acts should be
carefully read in connection with this epistle. It was
written while Paul was a prisoner at Rome, about A.
D. 61 or 62. (See Acts xxviii. 30 31, and Eph. iii. 1,
iv. 1, vi. 20.) The peculiar circumstances under which
he wrote and his deep interest in the doctrinal
purity of that church, as evinced in his address to the
Ephesian elders assembled at Miletus (Acts xx. 28-32),
led him to a dogmatic discussion of the peculiar tenets
of the religion of Christ, more characteristic of this
epistle, perhaps, than of any other except the epistle
to the Romans. It naturally divides itself into two
parts of three chapters each. In the first part (i., ii.,
iii.), as might be expected, the dogmatic or theological
element predominates, and in the second (iv. v. vi.),
the ethical or hortatory. He gives great prominence
to the doctrine of predestination, and insists with much
emphasis on the idea that Christ is the sufficient and
the only Saviour of lost man, and the Saviour equally
and in the same Way of both Jew and Gentile, in this
respect particularly the letter bearing a strong resem-
blance to the epistle to the Romans. The epistle abund-
antly asserts itself to be the composition of Paul, and the
composition of Paul addressed to the Ephesians (Eph.
i. 1, iii. 1), and to this both the internal evidence and
the testimony of the ancients exactly corresponds.
Witnesses for the EpisUe to the Ephesians. Clement of
Rome, Ilermas, Ignatius, Polycarp, Irenaeus, Theophi-
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T^E FOURTEEN EPISTLES .01?^ PAUL. 357
lus, Clement of Alexandria, TertuUian, Origen, Epiph-
anius, Augustin, Jerome, Eusebius.
Specimen of Testimony. Irenaevs. "As the blessed
Paul says in the epistle to the Ephesians, that we are
members of his body, of his flesh and of his bones."
Eph. V. 30. "And this also Paul says, for whatsoever
doth make manifest is light." Eph. v. 13.
Poly carp. "As it is said in these Scriptures, Be ye
angry and sin not. Let not the sun go down upon
your wrath." Eph. iv. 26. "Knowing that ye are
saved by grace, not of works." Eph. ii. 8.
(Jlement of Alexandria. "Wherefore, writing to
the Ephesians, he revealed most openly that which
was sought, speaking in this manner, until we all come
in the unity of the faith and the knowledge of God,
unto a perfect man." etc. Eph. iv. 13, 14. " Where-
fore, also, in the epistle to the Ephesians he writes,
Be subject one to another iij the fear of God." Eph.
V. 21.
TertuUian. " Here I pass by concerning the other
epistle which we have, written to the Ephesians."
" Indeed in the truth of the church we have that epis-
tle sent to the Ephesians."
Origen. " But also the apostle in the epistle to the
Ephesians, uses the same language when he says, Who
chose us before the foundation of the world." Eph. i. 4.
Ignatius. " Let no one of you be found a deserter.
Let your baptism remain as weapons, faith as a helmet,
love as a spear, patient continuance as the whole ar-
mor." Eph. vi. 13, 17. "As being stones of the tem-
ple of the Father, prepared for the habitation of God
the Father." Eph. ii. 20-22.
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358 THE BOOKS OF THE BI^LE.
Hermaa, " For it would become you as the servants
of God to walk in the truth, and not to join an evil
conscience with the spirit of truth, and not to make
grief for the true and Holy Spirit of God." iv. 30.
Clement of Borne. " Why should there be among
you contentions, wrath, dissensions, schisms and war?
Have we not one God and one Christ ? And is not
one spirit of grace poured out upon us? And is
there not one calling in Christ ? " Eph. iv. 4.
EPIBTLB TO THE PHttlPPIANa
Philippi was the first city in Europe where Paul
preached the Gospel and established a Christian church.
A full account of this important event, of the difficul-
ties which the apostle encountered, of the success
which attended his efforts, of the shameful abuses
which he suffered, and of his dignified assertion
of his own rights as a Roman citizen, and the tardy
but ultimately full concession of these rights by the
magistrates ; and a brief notice of a second visit there,
is found in Acts xvi. and xx. 2-6. There was a very ten-
der friendship between the apostle and the Philippian
Christians ; they had been liberal to him beyond what
he desired or they could really afford (Phil. iv. 15, 16,
2 Cor. viii. 1-6) ; and the occasion of his writing the
epistle was the generosity of his Philippian fnends in
sending Epaphroditus all the way to Rome with sup-
plies for his wants while he was a prisoner there."
Phil. iv. 18. It appears to have been written about
the middle of the yea/ 63 after Christ.
After an affectionate introduction (i. 1-11), and an
account of his condition in Rome and the opposition
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 359
he had encountered from Judaizing teachers (i. 12-26),
he exhorts them to union and humility (i. 27-ii. 16),
and gives them information in respect to Timothy
and the sickness and recovery of Epaphroditus (iL
17-30.) He then refers again to the opposition which
he had encountered from Jewish teachers, and the
attitude of his own mind in respect to their doctrines
(iii. 1-21), and concludes with affectionate exhorta-
tions and salutations (iv.). The epistle affirms itself
to be the writing of Paul to the Philippians (Phil. i. 1),
and to this all internal evidence and external testimony
corresponds.
Witnesses to Epistle to Philippians. Clement of Rome,
Ignatius, Polycarp, Letter to Diognetus, Letter of the
churches of Vienne and Lyons, Irenaeus, Theophilus,
Clement of Alexandria, TertuUian, Cyprian, Origen,
Eusebius, Augustin, Jerome.
Specimen of Testimony. Polycarp (writing to the
Philippijyis). " Of Paul . . . who also being absent
wrote letters to you, into which if ye look intently, ye
win be able to be built up into the faith given to you.'*
" You, among whom the blessed Paul labored, who are
praised in the beginning of his epistle ; for of you he
glories in all the churches which alone then knew God."
Phil. i. 5 ff
Irenaeus. "As also Paul says to the Philippians, I
am full, the things being received from Epaphroditus
which were sent by you, an odor of sweetness, an ac-
ceptable sacrifice, well pleasing to God." Phil. iv. 18."
Clement of Alexandria. " Paul also confessing con-
cerning himself, not as though I had already attained
or were already perfect," etc. Phil. iii. 12-14.
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360 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Church of Vienne and Lyons. " Who being in the
form of God thought it not robbery to be equal with
God." Phil.ii.6.
TertuUian. " Paul himself writes to the Philippians,
If by any means I may attain to the resurrection of
the dead." etc. Phil. iii. 11 ff.
Cyprian. "Also Paul to the Philippians, Who being
in the form of God," etc. Phil, ii 6-11.
Clement of Borne. " You see, men beloved, what
an example is given to us. For if the Lord so hum-
bled himself, what shall we do who come under the
yoke of his grace ?" Phil, ii f ff.
Ignatius. " I exhort you to do nothing by conten-
tion, but according to the discipline of Christ." Phil,
ii. 3.
Irenaeus. " Concerning which resurrection the apos-
tle, in that which is to the Philippians says, being made
conformable to his death, if by any means I may attain
to the resurrection which is from the dead." ^
Theophilua. "That indeed now these things are
true and useful and just and lovely to all men, is very
plain." Phil. iv. 8.
EPISTLE TO THE COLOSSIANS*
Colosse was a city of Asia Minor, near Laodicea
and Hierapolis, and in the same region with the seven
churches to which the Apocalypse was directed. Paul
had not been there personally (Col. ii. 1), though he
had twice passed through that country (Acts xvi. 6,
xviii. 23), but there were members of that church who
were very dear to him (Col. i. 7 ff., Philem) ; and at
the time of his writing this epistle, about A. D. 61 or
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 361
62, Epaphras, the teacher of the church, was with him
(Col. iv. 12, Philem. 23) while a prisoner at Rome.
This visit of Epaphras, and the intelligence which he
gave to Paul respecting the church at Colosse, afforded
the occasion of his writing this letter and sending it
on with the letter to Philemon by Tychichus and One-
simus (Col. iv. 7-9, Philem. 23).
After an introduction of thanksgiving and interces-
sion (i. 1-12), he testifies to the Colossians the exalted
dignity of the Redeemer and the benefits of the re-
demption received through him (i. 13-23), and affirms
that he himself rejoices to suffer for their salvation (i.
24-29), in order the more- effectually to warn them
against those who by worldly craft would seduce them
from Christ (ii. 1-15), for it is his chief object in wri-
ting to this church, for whose love and sympthy he
felt deeply grateful,, to protect them against certain
false teachers, who combined bigoted adherence to
certain Jewish principles with severe asceticism and
high pretensions to superior and mysterious wisdom
(ii. 16-23). The last half of the epistle is taken up
with eloquent and earnest exhortations to holiness of
life (iii., iv.).
In regard to this epistle also internal evidence and
external testimony fully agree.
Witneasea for Epistle to the Colossians. Clement of
Rome, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Theophilus, Clement
of Alexandria, Tertullian, Origen, Eusebius, Augustin,
Jerome.
Specimen of Testimony. Irenaeus iii. 14. "And
again in the epistle which is to the Colossians, he (Paul)
says, Luke the beloved physician saluteth you." Col.
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iv. 14. "And on this account the apostle in the epis-
tle which is to the Colossians says, And you that were
once alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked
works, yet now hath he reconciled in the body of his
flesh through his death to present you holy and pure
and without fault in his sight." Col. i. 21, 22.
Justin Martyr^ Dial. c. Tryph. p. 310. "He was
made flesh from the virgin's womb, the first bom of
all creatures." "Knowing him to be the first begotten
of God, and also of aU creatures." "The first bom of
every creature." Col. i. 15.
Clement of Rome. " Ye see, beloved, . . . unless
we walk worthy of him, and do those things which
are honorable and well pleasing in his sight with all
the heart." Col. i. 10.
TheopMlua^ ad Autol. p. 100. " He begat this word
the first bom of every creature." Col. i. 15.
Clement of Ahxavdria^ Strom, i. "In the epistle
to the Colossians, he writes warning every man and
teaching in all wisdom that we may present every man
perfect in Christ." Col. i. 28. Strom, vi. : "Likewise
he speaks to the Colossians who were converted from
among the Greeks, Beware lest any man spoil you
through philosophy," etc. Col. ii. 8.
Tertullian^ De Praes. Haer. c. 7. " The apostle wri-
ting to the Colossians, See lest any one circumvent
you by philosophy and vain seduction after the tradi-
tion of men," etc. Col. ii. 8. De Resurrect. Carnis. c.
23 : " Indeed the apostle writing to the Colossians
teaches that we were sometime dead, alienated and
enemies of the Lord in our mind, when we walked in
wicked works ; thence buried in the baptism of Christ
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 363
with him, and rising again with him by faith of the
efficacy of God, who raised him from the dead. And
when ye were dead in sins in the circumcision of your
flesh, he hath quickened you together with him," etc.
Col. ii. 11-13.
There can be no need of tracing the quotations down
any further. The testimony to this book, as to every
other thus far, is uniform and uncontradicted from the
beginning to pur own day, or at least to the times of
modem unhistorical criticism.
EPISTLES TO THE THESSALONIANS — I. AND H.
Thessalonica, atuated on a bay near the site of the
anfiient Therme, was a large and populous commer-
cial city, the capital of one of the four districts
into which the Romans divided the country of Mace-
donia. It received its name from its founder, Thesa-.
lonica, the wife of Cassander. Paul visited the city
in company with Silas and Timothy, and in a short time
gained many adherents, especially among the prose-
lytes to the Jewish religion ; but was soon compelled
to leave on account of disturbances excited by the
Jews (Acts xvii. 1-9). From thence he went to Beroea,
and driven also from that city he repaired to Athens,*
leaving his two companions behind with directions to
follow him speedily (Acts xvii. 10-15). He then went
to Corinth, where Timothy and Silas rejoined him (Acts
xviii. 5) ; and at a later period he made another jour-
ney to Macedonia and probably visited Thessalonica.
These two are the earliest of Paul's epistles which we
have, as the first was written as early as A. D. 52 or
53, and the second soon after, during his residence in
Corinth (2 Thess. iii. 2, Acts xviii. 12 ff.)
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Full of anxiety for the Thessalonians, he had sent
Timothy from Athens to inquire after them, and had
received information by him, (Thess. i 1 ; ii 17; ff.
iiL 1-6,) and had twice endeavored himself to return.
The church was in circumstances of affiction, and need-
ed encouragement and confirmation and further de-
velopment, (iiL 2-13) ; though it was strong in the
faith and alive in love, (iii 6-9, iv. 10.) They had
faults for which the apostle had verbally reproved
them, (iv. 3-6, 11, 12. v. 15,) and were in particular
need of information in regard to what would be the
future of those who were already dead at the final
coming of Christ, (iv. 13 — v. 11.)
The epistle consists of two parts, to wit :
1. The expression of the apostle's affection for the
Thessalonian church, a notice of their circumstances,
iis reception among them, his care for them, and the
comfort they gave him. i-iii
2. Ethical exhortations, comforting assurances in re-
gard to those who had died, (x.), and exhortations to
always be ready for death and the coming of Christ,
with concluding salutations, (v.)
TESTIMONIES TO L THESSALONIANa
dement of Rome. 1 Epistle ad Cor. c. -38. We
ought in every thing to give thanks iftito him. 1 Thess.
V. 18.
Wherefore let our whole body be preserved in Christ
Jesus. 1 Thess. v. 23.
Ignativs. ad Polyc, 2, 1. Be diligent in increas-
ing prayers. Thess. v. 17. Ad Ephes. 2, 10. And
also pray without ceasing for other men.
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 365
Polycarp^ ad Philip. 2, 4 Without ceasing inter-
ceding for all. Ibid. c. 2. Abstaining from all evil,
(y. 22).
Irenaeua. Haer., v. 6. And on this account the
apostle, in the first epistle to the Thessalonians, speak-
ing thus, May the God of penc3 sanctify you wholly,
and may your whole spirit, soul, and body be pre-
served unto the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ, (v :
23, V. 30.) This also the apostle says, When they
shall say peace and safety, then sudden destruction
Cometh upon them. v. 3.
Olement of Alexandria. Paed. i. p. 88. But this
also the blessed Paul most plainly signified, saying.
When we might have been burdensome as the apostles
of Christ, we were gentle in the midst of you, even as
a nurse cherisheth her children, ii. 7.
. Strom, i., p. 296. Prove all things, says the apostle,
and hold fast that which is good. v. 21:
TertalUan. DeResur. Cam., c. 24. Learn with the
Thessalonians, for we read, How ye turned from idols
to serve the living and true God, and to wait for his
Son from heaven, whom he raised from the dead, even
Jesus, i : 7, 10. And in the epistle itself, to the Thes-
salonians, he suggests, Of the times and the seasons,
brethren,- ye have no need that I write unto you ; for
yourselves know^perfectly that the day of the Lord so
Cometh as a thief in the night, v. 1, 2.
The second epistle to the jThessalonians was written
especially to correct a misunderstanding which had
arisen out of the first 1 Thess. iv. 17. In speaking of
the day of judgment he had said. Then we who are
alive and remain^ etc. Prom this some had inferred
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that he meant to teach that Christ would come to judg-
ment during the life time of that generation. In
2 Thess. ii., he positively denies that he entertains any-
such idea, or had given any such instruction. He
affirms that many important events were to occur be-
fore the second coming of the Lord, and they might
occupy a long time. He fixes no time, and inasmuch
as the time is entirely uncertain, "he uses the first per-
son plural, as a convenient indefinite designation of
Christians, at whatever time they might meet the Lord
at his coming. So Peter labors very earnestly to show
the Christians of his time, that without any violation
of the divine promise, a long time, as men view, time,
might yet inticrvene before the final coming of the
Lord, 2 Pet. iii. Whatever might have been the cur-
rent opinion on this subject, among private Christians,
the inspired teachers of the New Testament not only
did not teach the doctrine of the immediate coming of
the Lord, but they earnestly, emphatically and re-
peatedly taught the direct contrary. These two
chapters, 2 Thess. ii., and 2 Pet iii., are perfectly ex-
plicit on this point ; and the same idea is sufficiently in-
dicated ill other passages, such as Acts i: 7, John xxi:
21-23, Markxiii: 32, etc.
The second epistle to the ThessaJonians consists :
1. Of thanksgivings, prayers and* approval of the
Thessalonians, especially in reference to their praise*
worthy conduct under sutf^ring.
2. A correction of their mistaken notion that the
second advent of Christ was immediately to occur, and
warning them that this event must be preceded by a
great apostacy, requiring a considerable interval of
time.
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 387
j3. Admonitions and exhortations appropriate to
their condition ; concluding with a remarkable state-
ment of the manner in which he authenticated all his
epistles.
TESTDfONLkLS TO SECOND EPISTLE TO THE THES8AL0NIANS.
Polycarp, ad Phil., 2, 11. 'Yet esteem not such
as enemies, but as erring members recall them, that
ye may save your whole body' 2 Thess. iii. 15.
Among whom the blessed Paul labored, who are in
the beginning of his epistle, of you there is glorying
in all the churches, which then alone knew God.' 2
Thesa i. 5.
Justin Martyr. Dial., p. 336. ^When also the man
of the apostacy, speaking proud things against the
Most High,- will dare upon the earth lawless things
against us Christians.' 2 Thess., ii. 3, 4.
Irenaeus, Haer. v. 7. 'And again, in the sec-
ond to the Thessalonians, speaking concerning Anti-
christ, And then shall that wicked one be revealed,
whom the Lord Jesus Christ will slay with the spirit of
his mouth, and the presence of his advent will destroy
him, whose coming is after the working of "Satan, in
all power of signs and lying wonders.' 2 Thess. ii. 8.
Ibid. V. 25. Concerning whom the apostle, in the
epistle which is the second to the Thessalonians, thus
speaks. Unless there come a falling away first, and the
man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition, who op-
poseth and exalteth himself above all that is called
God, or is worshipped, so that he sits in the temple of
God, showing himself as if he were God.' 2 Thess,
ii 3, 4
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Clement of Alexandria. Strom, v., p. 554. The
apostle says there is not knowledge in all ; but pray
ye that we may be delivered jfrom unreasonable and
wicked men, for all men have not faith.' 2 Thess. iii . 2.
Tertullian. De Res. Car. ii. 24. ' And in the second
epistle to the Thessalonians, with a more correct solici-
tude to the same, But I beseech you, brethren, by the
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gather-
ing together unto him, that ye be not soon shaken in
your mind or troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word,
to wit, of false prophets, nor by epistle, to wit, of false
apostles, as if by us, as that the day of the Lord is at
hand.' 2 Thess. ii: 1-3. Scorpi., p. 498. *But Paul
the apostle, concerning the first persecutor, who first
shed the blood of the church, and afterwards changing
the sword for the pen says, so that
we ourselves may glory in you in the churches of God,
for your patience and faith in all your persecutions and
tribulations which ye endure, a token of the righteous
judgment of God, that ye may be counted worthy of
His kingdom, for which ye also sufier.' 2 Thess.
i. 4, 5.
THE rmST EPISTLE TO TIMOTHY.
The two epistles to Timothy and the epistle to Titus
are called pastgral epistles^ because in them Paul gives
directions to these two helpers of his, as to how they
should conduct themselves as the shepherds and the
patterns of the flock over which they were placed.
Timothy was a native of the city of Lystra in Lycaonia
in Asia Minor, the son of a Greek father and Jewish
mother. He was received into the church by Paul, be-
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 369
came his companion and fellow-laborer in Macedonia and
Achaia and was his fellow-prisoner at Rome. Acts
xvi-xx.
It is not easy to determine the precise date of the
first epistle to Timothy, nor is this necessary to an un-
derstanding of its contents or the establishment of its
genuineness. It is quite probable that it was written
from Macedonia, about A. D. 63 or 64, and not im-
possible that it might have been written from Laodicea,
according to the old superscription.
Paul had departed from Ephesus for the purpose of
going to Macedonia, with the intention of speedily re-
turning ; and leaving Timothy meanwhile in charge of
the Ephesian church, writes to him these directions,
(1 Tim. i. 3, iiL 13.) The epistle begins with per-
sonal reminiscencies and affectionate talk with Timo-
thy, (i.) proceeds to instructions in regard to public
worship, (ii.) and the qualifications of church officers,
(uL) He then foretells the coming in of false teach-
ers and various corruptions, and instructs Timothy in
regard to the course he was to pursue when he had
these difficulties to encounter, and concludes a& usual
with the grace he with thee, iv-vi.
TBSTDiONLAXS TO THE FmST EPISTLE TO TIMOTHY..
Polycarp. ad Philip. 2, 12. "Pray for all the saints,
pray also for kings and princes and all that are; in aTa>
thority." 1 Tim. ii. 1, 2.
Ihict 2, 4. "The love of money is. the beginning
of all evils. But knowing that we brought nothing
into this world and can carry nothing out, let us arm
ourselves with the weapons of rig.hteousness." 1 Tim^
yi 7, 10. 24
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370 BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
Epistle to Diognetua. "Being reckoned faithful by
Him they knew the mysteries of the Father. On which
account he sent the Word that He might appear to the
world ; who was despised by the people, preached by
apostles, believed on by the Gentiles," 1 Tim. iii : 16.
Epistle of the Churches at Vienne and Lyons.
''But overwhelmingly their whole fury fell upon.
Attains, a native of Pergamus, who had always been the
pillar and stay of the faithful there." 1 Tim. iii : 15,
compare Rev. iii: 12.
"Alcibiades, one of the martyrs, led a squalid and
ascetic life, accepting no' food but bread and water
only up to that time. When he was put in prison he
wished to retain the same mode of living ; but after
the first conflict in the amphitheatre it was revealed to
Attains that Alcibiades was not doing right, and set
an evil example for others, in that he did not use the
creatures of God. And Alcibiades being persuaded
then began to use all kinds of food promiscuously and
gave thanks to God." 1 Tim. iv. 3, 4.
Irenaeus. Haer. i: 1. "And some opposing the
^ truth bring in false words and vain genealogies,
which, as the apostle says, minister questions rather
than godly edifying which is in faith." 1 Tim. i. 4.
Ibid. ii. 4. "And well Paul says, novelties of words
of false science. 1 Tim. vi. 20.
Athenagoras. Legat. pro Christ, p. 15. "For God
is all things to himself, light inaccessible, universe per-
fect, spirit, power, word." 1 Tim. vi. 16.
Theophilus. Ad AutoL iii. " And also that we should
be subject to magistrates and powers, and pray for
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OP PAUL. 371
them, our divine word commands in order that we may
lead a quiet and peaceable life," 1 Tim. ii. I, 2, see
Tit iii. 1.
Clement of Alexandria^ Strom, ii., p. 383. "Con-
cerning ^hich the apostle writing says, 0, Timothy,
keep that which is committed to thee, avoiding profane
novelties of words and oppositions of science falsely
so called, which some professing have erred concern-
ing the faitL By this word are those heretics re-
proved who set aside the epistle to Timothy." 1 Tim.
vi: 20, 21.
IhH. ii. p. 464. "Whence also the apostle^ I will
says he that the younger women marry, b^^ children,
guide the house, give none occasion to the adversary
to speak reproachfully, for some are already turned
aside to Satan." 1 Tim. v. 14, 15.
Admon. ad Gent. " Godliness is profitable to all
things, says Paul, having the promise of the present
life and of the future." 1 Tim. iv. 8.
TertulUan. De Praescr. Haer. 2, 25. "And Paul
to Timothy uses this word, 0 Timothy keep that which
is committed to thee." 1 Tim. vi. 20.
De Pudicit. 2, 13. "Plainly the same apostle deliv-
ers to Satan Hymenaeus and Alexander that they may
learn not to blaspheme, as he writes to Timothy."
1 Tim. i 20.
Jerome. Comment, in Epist. Tit. "Speaking of
Marcion and Basilides and all heretics, Jerome says,
that rejecting gospels and epistles he wonders how
they dare assume to themselves the Christian name, for,
to be silent concerning other epistles, from which they
erase whatever they see contrary to their own dogmas.
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372 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
"they reject some entire epistles, as Timothy, Hebrews,
Titus, which we are now undertaking to explain. In-
deed if they gave any reasons why they suppose these
epistles not to be the apostle's, we should endeavor to
reply and perhaps satisfy the reader. But now they
pronounce with heretic authority, and say, this epistle
is Paul's, and this is not."
THE SECOND EPISTLE TO TIMOTHY.
This epistle Paul writes from Rome, where he is im-
prisoned, inviting Timothy, who is at Ephesus, to come
to him and bring Mark with him (2 Tim. i. 8, 12, 16,
iv. 5, 9, 11, 16, 19, 21). The date of it is shortly be-
fore the apostle's martyrdom, probably A. D. 65 or 66.
He expresses his aflFection for Timothy, and calls to
mind various interesting personal incidents (L), ex-
horts to purity of life and fortitude under affliction (ii.),
warns of corruptions and false teachers, and expresses
his own calmness and happiness in view of his ap-
proaching martyrdom (iv.).
Testimonies to the Second Epistle to Timothy. Bar-
nabas^ Epis. 7. "If the Son of God, who is the Lord,
and will judge the quick and dead, suffered," etc.
2 Tim. iv. 1.
Ignatius^ ad Ephes. ii. 2. " But also Crocus, who is
worthy of God and of you, whom I received as a
proof of your love, refreshed me in all things ; and in
like manner will the Father of Jesus Christ refresh
him." 2 Tim. i. 16, 18! "You have refreshed me in
all things as Jesus Christ refreshed you. You have
loved me both absent and present ; The Lord will re-
ward you." 2 Tim. i. 16, 18. Ad Polyc. c. 6 : "Please
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OP PAUL. 373
Him for whom you are soldiers, and from whom you
receive wages." 2 Tim. ii 4.
Poly carp ^ Ep. ad Philip, "As He hath promised us
that He will raise us from the dead, and that, if we
walk worthy of Him we shall reign with Him, provided
that we believe." 2 Tim. ii 11, 12.
Irenaeus^ Haer, iii. 3. "The blessed apostle,
therefore, founding and building up the church gave
over the pastorship to Linus for the administering of
the church. Of this Linus Paul makes mention in his
epistles which are to Timothy." 2 Tim. iv. 21. Ibid^
V. 20 : " Ever learning and never finding the truth."
2 Tim. iii. 7.
Clement of Alexandria^ Strom, iii p. 448. " For
we know what the most excellent Paul teaches respect-
ing women deacons in his second epistle to Timothy."
Ibtdj i. p. 270: "Thou therefore be strong, also says
Paul, in the grace which is in Christ Jesus, and what
thou hast heard from me among many witnesses, the
same commit thou to faithful men who shall be able to
teach others also. And again. Study to show thyself
approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to
be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth."
2 Tim. ii. 1, 2, 15. Admon. ad Gentil. p. 56: "The
apostle knowing this teaching to be really divine says.
Thou, 0 Timothy, from a child hast known the sacred
Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto sal-
vation through faith in Christ." 2 Tim. iii. 15.
Teriullian^ Scorpiac. c. 13. "You see how he de-
scribes the felicity of martyrdom, .... Exulting he
writes to Timothy, For I am now ready to be oflTered
and the time of my departure is at hand. I have
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374 THE BOOKS OP THE BIBLE.
fought the good fight, I have finished my course, I
have kept the faith, there remains for me a crown
which the Lord will give me in that day." 2 Tim.
iv. 6-8.
Ortgen, Comment, in Matt iiL p. 916. "Also what
he says as Jannes and Mambres withstood Moses ; this
is not found in the public Scriptures, but in a secret
book which is entitled. The Book of Jannes and Mam-
bres." 1 Tim. iii. 8.
Eu8ehiu8^ E. H. iii. 4. " Linus whom he (Paul) has
mentioned in his second epistle to Timothy." H. E.
ii. 22 : " While he (Paul) was a prisoner at Rome, he
wrote his second epistle to Timothy in which he both
mentions his first defence and his impending death.
Hear on these points his own testimony respecting
himself. In my former defence no one was present
with me but all deserted me. May it not be laid to
their charge. But the Lord was with me and strength-
ened me, that through me the preaching of the Gospel
might be fulfilled and all the nations might hear it.
And I was rescued out of the lion's mouth.' He plainly ,
intimates in these words, ' On the former occasion he
was rescued from the lion's mouth, that the preaching
of the Gospel might be accomplished,' that it was
Nero to whom he referred by this expression, as is
probable on account of his cruelty. Therefore he did
not subsequently subjoin any such expressions as ' he
will rescue me from the lion's mouth,' for he saw in
spirit how near his approaching death was. Hence
after the expression, ' I was rescued from the lion's
mouth,' this also, ' the Lord will rescue me from every
evil work, and will save me unto his heavenly king-'
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THE FOURTBBir BPISTLES OF PAUL. 375
dom,' indicating the martyrdom that he would soon
suflfer ; which he more clearly expreesed in the same
epistle, ' for I am already poured out, and the time of
my departure is at hand.' And indeed in this second
epistle to Timothy, he shows that Luke alone was with
him when he wrote, but at his former defence not even
he." 2 Tim, iv. 16, 18, vi 8, 11.
We see in all these testimonies, when the witnesses
quote passages at large, that their New Testament
books not only had the same names which we now
have, but precisely the same contents, the ancient and
the modem being identical throughout
EPISTLE TO Trrua
Titus, a Greek by birth, was an assistant of the apos-
tle Paul, was with him on his journey to Jerusalem
(Gal. i. 1-3) ; fulfilled commissions for him in Corinth
(2 Cor. viL 6-^, viii, 6-23, xii. 18), and was now left
in Crete to attend to ecclesiastical duties in that island
(Tit. L 5 £)• The object of this epistle is to give
him instructions in respect to the discharge of those
duties.
1. Instructions in regard to the appointment of
elders and the treatment of false teachers (i.). 2. The
guiding of the congregation in reference to the diflfer-
ent ranks in society (ii.). 3. Ethical principles of a
general character, warning in regard to controversies,
and personal notices (iii.).
The epistle was probably written between the first
and the second epistle to Timothy.
Testimonies to Titvs. Clement of Bome^ First Epis-
tle to Cor. iL 2. "Be ready to every good work.''
Tit. iii 1.
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Ignatius;, ad Trail, c. 3. "Whose very behaviour
(habit) {itaiaatrifia) is a great discipline." Tit. ii. 3, is the
only passage in the New Testament where this Greek
word occurs.
Irenaevs^ Haer. iii. 3. "As the blessed Paul also
says, A man that is a heretic after the first and second
admonition, reject ; knowing that he who is such is
perverted and condemned of himself." Tit. iiL 10, 11,
V. 15. "Jesus said to him, Go to Siloam and wash,
at the same time restoring to him the clay ointment
{plasmationem)^ and that which is the regeneration by
washing." Tit. iii. 5. i. 16: "As many as stand off
from the church and give heed to these old wives'
fables are truly condenmed of themselves, whom the
apostle Paul commands us after the first and second
admonition to reject." Tit. iii. 10, 11.
Theophilus^ ad Autol. iii. p. 122. "But we have a
lawgiver who is truly God, who teaches us to live a
righteous, godly and honorable life." Tit. ii. 11, 12.
ii p. 95: "Men about to receive repentance and re-
mission of sins all come to the truth by water and the
washing of regeneration, and being regenerated receive
blessing from God." Tit. iii. 5. 6.
Clement of Alexandria^ Strom, i. p, 299. "Epimeni-
des, a Cretan, a Greek prophet whom Paul knew, of
whom he makes mention in the epistle to Titus, speak-
ing thus, One of themselves, even a prophet of their
own, said, the Cretans are always liars, evil beasts,
slow bellies." Tit i. 12. Admon. ad Gent. p. 6 : " But
now, as the divine apostle of the Lord said. The grace
of God which bringeth salvation hath appeared unto
all men, teaching us that denying ungodliness and
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THE. FOURTEEN EPISTLES OP PAUL. 377
worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously and
godly in the world, looking for that blessed hope, even
the glorious appearing of the great God and our
Saviour Jesus Christ." Tit ii 11-13.
Tertullian^ De. Praes. Haer. "And Paul
suggests that a man who is a heretic should be rejected
after the first admonition, because that such a one is
perverse and in fault, and is condemned of himself"
Tit. iii. 10, 11.
Tertullian here refers to the epistle to the Galatians
as if the passage were to be found there ; but it is only
one of the numerous instances of quotations merely
from memory, and without any solicitude for literal
accuracy, which are so common with the fathers, and
should always be taken into the account when we are
reading them.
EPISTLE TO PHILEMON.
This letter was addressed not only to Philemon, but
also to the church which met at his house (1, 2).
It belongs to A. D. 61 or 62. Philenion was a wealthy
citizen of Colosse, a relative of Apphia and Archippus,
(perhaps husband and father,) who had been converted
to Christianity by the apostle Paul (13. 19). He
was a generous believer, full of faith and good works
(4, 7), and the apostle had entire confidence in
him (14, 22). Onesimus, an ill-conditioned servant
of his, had robbed him and then fled to Rome (10,
11, 18, 19) ; where he had met with the apostle Paul,
had by him been converted to Christ and was much
beloved by the apostle (12, 13). Wishing to re-
turn to his home the apostle sends him with this won-
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derfully aflFectionate and beautiful letter, to be received
bj Philemon no longer as a slave, but as a friend, as
a brother beloved (16); for so much the apostle
required ; and he had confidence in Philemon that he
would do not only this, but even more than he had
asked (21). The whole transaction was voluntary
(19), spontaneous, joyous in regard to all three;
there was no need of applying to the police or calling
out the militia, or putting a chain around the court-
house, or doing any of those violent and disgraceful
things, which made some of our American cities infa-
mous, when fugitive slaves were to be returned to their
southern masters. Of all the shameful travesties of
Scripture, there never was one more shameful and
ridiculous than that which put the story of Paul and
Onesimus on a parallel with the transactions under the
Satanic fugitive slave law of America.
Testimonies to the Epistle to Philemon. Ignatius^ ad
Ephes. c. 2, Magnes. c. 12, Polyc. c. 6. " I would en-
joy you perpetually if only I may be worthy." "I
would enjoy you in all things, if indeed I may be wor»
thy." "I would enjoy you perpetually." Phil. 20.
TertaUian^ ad Marc. v. 42. " Its brevity gave to
this epistle alone the privilege of escaping the feJsi-
fying hands of Marcion."
Epiphanius^ Haer. xlii. 9. "Marcion receives ten
epistles of this holy apostle, . . . the ninth being that
to Philemon."
Origen^ Homil. in Jerem. 19. "Which Paul also
knowing said to Philemon in regard to Onesimus, in
his epistle to Philemon, that thy benefit should not be
of necessity, but willingly." PhiL 14. Matth. Com.
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OP PAUL 379
tra€t. 34: "As Paul says to Philemon, For we have
great joy and consolation in thy love, because the
bowels of the saints are refreshed by thee, brother."
Phil. 7. Ihid^ tract. 3: "But concerning Paul it is
said to Philemon, being such an one as Paul the aged."
PhiL 9.
. Jerome^ Comment Epist. ad Phil. Jerome is speak-
ing of those who would exclude the epistle to Phile-
mon from the canon on the ground that it is simply a
private letter, treating of personal affairs, and not a
public doctrinal treatise, and says, if epistles contain-
ing allusions to private aflEEiirs are to be judged not to
be apostolic, not to belong to Paul, then we must re-
ject Romans, Timothy, Galatians, Corinthians, and
others ; but if we receive these, there is no ground for
rejecting Philemon.
EPISTLE TO THE HEBBEWS.
It is the purpose of the epistle to the Hebrews to
provp to the Hebrew Christians, that the new dispen-
sation is the reality and perfection of that divine reve-
lation of which the old dispensation was but the type
and the imperfect beginning. It is written with great
care and in a style of remarkable correctness. The
name of the author is not attached to it. If Paul
were the writer there is good reason for both these
striking facts. His name and his doctrinal peculiari-
ties were not in good odor among the Hebrews ; and
therefore, as a wise man, he would not needlessly
parade his name before their eyes, and would exercise
all possible care in the statement of his doctrines.
The learned and candid Roman Catholic, Professor
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Hug concludes his laborious investigation of this sub-
ject with the following emphatic declaration: *'The
more intimately I become acquainted with the writings
of the apostle (Paul), the more I am disposed to re-
gard the epistle to the Hebrews as his masterpiece. It
bears the seal of the completion, as the epistles to the
Thessalonians do that of the commencement, of his
literary career."
The question of authorship is and must be, as we
have before stated, mainly a question of testimony, of
external evidence ; and, as we shall see in the exhibi-
tion of the testimony, if Paul is supposed not to be
the author, the mention of any other name in connec-
tion with the authorship, is mere guess work without
any solid foot-hold whatever.
The author first sets forth the connection between
the old revelations and the new, and the infinite supe-
riority of the Son of God, the author of the new rev-
elation, over the prophets and even the angels who
were the heralds of the old, (I ii). He then proceeds
to demonstrate the superiority of Christ to Moses, the
one merely the servant, the other the Son, the rightful
and only inheritor, (iii). Christ also as high priest is
superior to the high priest of the old covenant, being
a regal priest after the order of Melchisedek, having a
perpetual priesthood, and a priesthood of the realities
and not of the mere type and images of the heavenly
things, (iv-x). Then follow practical exhortations,
earnest warnings, illustrations of faith from Old Testa-
ment examples, and allusions to personal circumstances
and feelings. The date of the epistle and the place
of writing it is impossible now to ascertain. The old
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OP PAUL. 381
r
inscription at the close says it was written in Italy and
forwarded by Timothy ; and nobody now knows any-
thing more on this subject than the writer of this in-
scription. From the very earliest times, by the very
first of the apostolic fathers, the personal friends of the
apostles themselves, this epistle has been quoted and
appealed to as an undoubted portion of Holy Scrip-
ture, though we do not find the name of the author
mentioned till we come to Pantaenus, the celebrated
principal of the theological school at Alexandria, about
A. D. 180, who unhesitatingly ascribes it to Paul ; and
from that time the writers in the Eastern church almost
without exception accept Paul as the author ; while in
the Western church there was more hesita.tion and
doubt as to the author, though none in respect to its
canonicity and authority ; till we come to Jerome and
Augustin, from which time it was universally received
in the church as a genuine and scriptural epistle of the
apostle Paul. Individual doubters as to the author
have often shown themselves, and in modem times
they have become numerous, but the great body of
the believers have always recognized in it the hand of
Paul the great apostle. All the ancient catalogues of
any authority assign fourteen epistles to Paul, which
necessarily includes Hebrews, for without this there are
but thirteen. There is certainly no decided internal
evidence against the authorship of Paul, while there is
very much in its favor ; while of the external evidence,
the testimony, it is ten to one, ninety-nine to a hun*
dred, in favor of Paul. In consequence of the contro-
versies on the subject, it wfll be expedient to give
these testimonies a little more at large than we have
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done in some other cases, though after all our limits will
allow us to give but a very small portion of the whole.
The ancients knew no other author than Paul ; if Paul
were not the writer we find nothing in them on the
subject
Clement of Borne. In regard to the testimony of
this writer respecting the epistle to the Hebrews, let us
first attend to the following statement by Jerome, (Cat
Script EccL, a 15). " Clement, in behalf of the Ro-
man church, wrote a very valuable epistle to the church
of the Corinthians, which in some places is publicly
read, and which seems to me to correspond in charac-
ter very much to the epistle to the Hebrews, which is
circulated under the name of Paul He takes many
things from that epistle ; not only in meaning but in
the words themselves there is a great similitude be-
tween theuL"
The following extracts from this epistle of Clement,
fully justify these statements of Jerome, and strongly
corroborate the canonical authority of the epistle to
the Hebrews. We select but a very few out of the
whole number.
''By him would God have us to taste the knowledge
of immortality; who, being the brightness of his
glory, is by so much greater than the angels, as he hath
by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than
they. For so it is written, Who maketh his angels
spirits, and his ministers a flame of fire. But to his
Son, thus saith the Lord, Thou art my Son, to-day
have I begotten thee. Ask of me, and I will give thee
the heathen for thine inheritance, and the utmost parts
of the earth for thy possession. And again he saith
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 383
unto him, Sit thou on my right hand, until I make
thine enemies thy footstool. (Heb. i).
Thus has the humility and godly fear of these great
and excellent men, recorded in the Scriptures, through
obedience, made not only us, but also the generations
before us, better ; even as many as have received his
holy oracles with fear and truth. Having therefore so
many, and such great and glorious examples, let us re-
turn to that peace, which was the mark that from the
beginning was set before us : Let us look up to the
Father and Creator of the whole world ; and let us
hold fast to his glorious and exceeding gifts and bene-
fits of peace. (Heb. xii).
Let us receive correction, at which no man ought
to repine. Beloved, the reproof and the correction
which we exercise towards one another, is good, and
exceedingly profitable ; for it unites us the more closely
to the will of God For so says the Holy Scripture,
The Lord corrected me, but he did not deliver me
over unto death. For whom the Lord loveth he chas-
teneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth.
Let us be followers of those who went about in goat-
skins and sheep-skins, preaching the coming of Christ.
(Heb. xi).
All things are open before him ; nor can any thing
be hid from his counsel. For he is the searcher of the
thoughts and counsels of the heart ; whose breath is
in us, and when he pleases he can take it from us.
(Heb. iv).
Moses was called faithful in all God's House ; and by
his conduct the Lord punished Israel by stripes and
plagues. (Heb. iii).
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Having therefore this hope, let us hold fast to him
who is faithful in all his promises, and righteous in all
his judgments ; who has commanded us not to lie, how
much more will he not himself lie ? For nothing is
impossible with God, but to lie. (Heb. vi).
Justin Martyr, Dial p. 341. " This is he who is
according to the order of Melchisedec king of Salem,
being an eternal priest of the most high." (Heb. v: 9,
16, vi: 20, vii: 12). (p. 323). "Eternal priest of
God, and king, and Christ." Apol. i. "But he is also
called an angel and apostle." Heb. iii: 1. This is the
only passage in the whole Bible where Christ is called
an apostle.
Irermeua. Haer. ii 30. "He alone is God who
made all things, the only omnipotent, the only Father,
building and making all things, both visible and in-
visible, both sensible and senseless, both celestial and
terrestrial, by the word of his power." (Heb. i; 3).
V. 5. "Enoch having pleased God was translated in the
body, foreshowing the translation of the saints." (Heb.
ii: 5).
Clement of Alexandria. Strom, vi p. 645. "For
Paul also — writing to the Hebrews — and ye again
have need that I should teach you what be the first
principles of the oracles of God, and have become as
those who have need of milk and not of strong meat"
(Heb. v: 12). ibid. ii. p. 420. "But we desire that
each one of you should show the same diligence to the
full assurance of hope, until made a high priest after
the order of Melchisedec ; the like things says the all
virtuous wisdom to the apostle PauL" (Heb. vii).
Tertullian. De Pudic. a 20. "Therefore admonish-
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 385
ing the disciples that leaving the first principles they
should go on to perfection, not laying again the foun-
dation of repentance from works of the dead,, for it
is impossible he says, that those who were once en-
lightened and have tasted the heavenly gift, and par-
ticipated in the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the sweet
word of God, when they fall away, that they should be
recalled to penitence, they having crucified to them-
selves the Son of God afresh and put Him to an open
shame." (Heb. vi l-6>
Origen. Epist ad Afr. "The author of the epistle
to the Hebrews says, They were stoned, they were
sawn asunder, they were slain with the sword" Heb,
XL 37. Com. in Joan, ii "And Paul himself says in
the epistle to the Hebrews, In these last days He hath
spoken to us by His Son, whom He hath made heir of
all things, by whom also He made the world" Heb.
i 2, Com. in Epist Bom. viL "Angels themselves
also, if you look to the sentiment of Paul, what he
says, that they are ministering spirits sent forth to min-
ister to those who shall be the heirs of salvation." Heb,
i 7, 14 Com. in Joan. xx. " When also it is written
in the epistle to the Hebrews, But solid food is for
them who are perfect" Heb. v. 14 De Orat "But
these are his very words in the epistle to the Hebrews^
But now once in the end of the world hath he appear-
ed to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself." Heb.
ix. 26. In Num. Horn. 2: "But Paul also himself,
writing to the Hebrews says. Ye have not come to the
tangible mountain and the burning fire, but ye have
com^ to mount Zion« Heb. xii 13.
25
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Athanastus. 0pp. I p. 266. "For also the blessed
Paul in the epistle to the Hebrews said, By faith we
understand that the worlds were mode by the word of
God." Heb. xL 3. ibid, p. 265. And also the
apostle said, " God who at sundry times and in divers
manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the
prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by His
Son, whom He hath appointed heir of all things, by
whom also He made the world." Heb. i 1, 2.
Epiphaniua, Haer. 70. Which the apostle indi-
cates in these words, "For the word of God is quick,
and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword,
piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and
spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner
of the thoughts and intents of the heart. Neither is
there any creature that is not manifest in his sight : but
all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him
with whom we have to da" Heb. iv. 12, 13. And
then also concerning those who have an honorable
marriage he says, "Marriage is honorable in all, and
the bed undefiled : but whoremongers and adulterers
God will judge." Heb. xiii. 4. Haer. 69. "But they
(the Arians), repudiate this epistle to the Hebrews and
reject it from the apostolic writings."
Theodoret Interpret. Epist ad Heb. " They who
are afflicted with the Arian disease do nothing that is
surprising if they rage against the apostolic epistles,
and separate the epistle to the Hebrews from the rest
and call it spurious."
Jerome. Epist ad Dard. "The epistle which is in-
scribed to the Hebrews, is received as the work of the
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 387
apostle Paul, not only by the churches of the East,
but by all the ecclesiastical writers in the Greek lan-
guage." In Matth. i 26. "For also Paul, in his epistle
which is written to the Hebrews, though many of the
Latins have doubts concerning it." Comment, in
IsaiauL iil 6. "Whence also Paul, in the epistle to
the Hebrews, which the Latin custom does not receive,
says, Are they not all ministering spirits ?"
As Eusebius is so important a witness, and he col-
lected and examined most of the testimonies which
existed in his own time, it will be of decided utility,
in regard to the books of which he expresses any
doubt, to place in one view his own testimony and that
which he collects from others. • I therefore here place
by itself, a portion of the testimonies collected by Euse-
bias in regard to the epistle to the Hebrews.
E. H. V. 26. "Besides the works and epistles of
Irenaeus, above mentioned, there is a book
also of various disputations, in which he mentions the
epistle to the Hebrews," etc.
E. H. vi. 14. The epistle to the Hebrews he (Clem-
ent of Alex'a) asserts was written by Paul, to the Hebrews
in the HebreV tongue ; but that it was carefully transla-
ted by Luke, and published among the Greeks. Whence,
also, one finds the same character of style and of phrase-
ology in the epistle as in the Acts. "But it is proba-
ble that the title, Paul the Apostle, was not prefixed
to it For as he wrote to the Hebrews, who had im-
bibed prejudices against him, and suspected him, he
wisely guards against diverting them from the perusal,
by giving his name." A little after this he observes:
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"But now as the blessed presbyter used to say, 'Since
the Lord who was the apostle of the Almighty, was
sent to the Hebrews, Paul by reason of hia inferiority,
as if sent to the Gentiles, did not subscribe himself an
apostle of the Hebrews ; both out of reverence for the
Lord, and because he wrote of his abundance to the
Hebrews, as a herald axid apostle of the Gentiles. ' '^
E. H. vi. 41. Dionysius of Alexandria says, " There
were some who took the spoiling of their goods joy-
fully, like those of whc^a the apostle Paul testifies.^^
Heb. x. 39.
R H. iii. 38. " We may mention as an instance
what Ignatius has said in the epistles we have cited,
and Clement of Rome in that universally received by
all, which he wrote in the name of the church at Rome
to that of Corinth. In which, after giving many senti-
ments taken fircmi l^e epistle to the Hebrews, and also
literally quoting the words, he mo^t clearly shows that
this work is by no means a late production. Whence
it is probable that this was also numbered with the
other writings of the apostles. For as Paul had ad-
dressed the Hebrews in the language of his country ;
some say that the evangelist Luke, others that Clement,
translated the epistle. Which also appears more like
the truth, as the epistle of Clement and that to the
Hebrews, preserve the same features of style and
phraseology, and because the sentiments in both these
works are not very difltereni"
E. H. il 17. Eusebius is quoting from an account
of the ascetics in Egypt by Philo, and says : "After
other matters, he adds : ' The whole time between the
morning and evening, is a constant exercise ; for as
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THE FOURTEEN EPISTLES OF PAUL. 389
they are engaged with the sacred Scriptures, they rea-
son and comment upon them, explaining the philoso-
phy of their country in an allegorical manner. For
they consider the verbal interpretation as signs indica-
tive of a secret sense communicated in obscure intima-
tions. They have also commentaries of ancient men,
who, as the founders of the sect, have left many mon-
uments of their doctrine in allegorical representations,
which they use as certain models, imitating the manner
of the original institution.' These facts appear to
have been stated by a man who, at least, has paid atten-
tion to those that have expounded the sacred writings.
But it is highly probable, that the ancient commenta-
ries which he says they have, are the very gospels and
writings of the apostles, and probably some exposi-
tions of the ancient prophets, such as are contained in
the epistle to the Hebrews and many others of St
Paul's epistles.'*
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CHAPTER ELEVENTH.
THE SEVEN CATHOLIO EPISTLES AND THE COMPARISON OF
THE APOGBTPHAL EPISTLES WITH THE CANONICAL.
THE SEVEN CATHOLIC EPISTLE&
The seven Catholic epistles, which in the common
edition of the Testament immediately follow the four-
teen epistles of Paul, though in the earlier manuscripts
they precede instead of follow Paul, are so called be-
cause, with a single exception, and that the shortest
one, the third of John, they are not addressed to any
particular church or person, but have a general direc-
tion, and by some of the ancients they are called evan-
gelical or circular letters (Oecumenius, Proleg. in Ep.
Jac).
In general they have always formed a part of the
canon of the New Testament Any partial exception
to this rule will be adverted to in the notices of the
separate books.
EPISTLE OF JAHE&
In the historical books of the New Testament we read
of James the son of Zebedee, one of the twelve apos-
tles of our Lord, who very early suflfered martyrdom
(Acts xii) ; of James the son of Alpheus, and of James
the brother of our Lord. The last two are supposed
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392 THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
by many to be identical, and it is not easy, either from
the statements of Scripture or the testimony of the
early ecclesiastical historians, to decide positively
whether they are so or not. From the best examina-
tion which I have beea able to mflke, it ie my opinion
that James the brother of the Lord is a different per-
son from James the son of Alpheus, and that it was the
idea of the perpetual virginity of Mary which induced
many of the early church fathers to identify the two.
James, the brother of our Lord, was, as I think, a
younger son of Mary the mother of Jesus ; he is the
one mentioned in Acts xii. 17, xv. 13, xxL 18, 6a.L ii.
9, Matt. xiiL 56, Mark vi. 3 ; and it was he who pre-
sided so long and so honorably over the church at Je-
rusalem, till he met with a violent death at the hands
of a mob as related by Josephus (Antiq. xx. 8:1)
and by Eusebius (E. H. ii. 23) ; and that this is the
James who wrote the epistle. There are no data
for fixing the time of its composition. It may have
been as early as A. D. 45 or as late as 62, but the ear-
lier date is the more probable.
It is the object of the epistle to exhort to steadfast-
ness in the Christian profession, to rebuke certain faults
which began to be prevalent in the Christian churches
composed principally of Jews, and particularly to
guard against the abuses of the doctrine of salvation
by faith alone. This last characteristic favors the idea
of the later date of the epistle. It was addressed par-
ticularly to Jewish Christians living out of Palestine
(James i. 1, ii. 21) ; and it is not at all systematic in
its arrangement, but impulsive and miscellaneous. It
contemplates the afficted and oppressed condition of
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THE SBVEir CATHOLIC EPISTLES. 393
the Hebrew Christians, and warns against the mistake
of those who are hearers of the word only without
practical obedience (i), rebukes a manifest partiality
for rich men in the congregations (ii), shows the ne-
cessity of good works as the fruit and the evidence of
faith (iiL-iv.); gives a reproof of oppressive rich men,
exhortation to steadfastness under persecution, warning
against extra judicial oaths, and directions for the care
of the sick (v.).
The epistle was received as genuine Scripture in the
Syrian Peschito, and is quoted by the Syrian saint,
Ephraem, as the work of our Lord's brother. It was
read by the apostolic fathers, Clement of Rome and
Irenaeus; it is expressly mentioned by Origen, doubtful-
ly received by Eusebius, and rejected by Theodore of
Mopsuestia. During liie fourth century it obtained full
canonical authority both in the Greek and Latin
churches. All this will clearly appear in the quota-
tions which follow.
TESTDCOKIES TO THE EPISTLE OF JAMEa
JE^hraem Syr;^ Opp, Graec. iiL 51. "James, the
brother of our Lord, says. Howl and weep." James v. 1.
dement of Rome, 1 Epist ad Cor. c. 30. " For God,
he Bays, resisteth the proud, but giveth grace to the
humble." James iv. 6. c. 38 : " Let the wise man
shew his wisdom not in words but in good works."
James iiL 13. a 17 : "Abraham had a great testimo-
ny and was called the friend of God." James ii 23.
c. 10: "Abraham, who was called God's friend, was in
like manner found faithful, inasmuch as he obeyed the
commands of God" James iL 23. c. 31 : " On what
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account was our father Abraham blessed ? Was it not
that through faith he wrought righteousnes and
truth?" James ii 2. C. 23: "Far be from us that
Scripture which says, Miserable are the double minded
and those who are doubtful of soul." James i 8.
Shepherd of Hermas^ Simil. v. 4. " Whoever is the
servant of God and has the Lord in his heart, he seeks
wisdom from Him and obtains it. . . . Let them
not hesitate to seek of the Lord, for the Lord is of
goodness so profound that to those seeking from Him
He gives all things without interruption." James i. 5.
Command, xii. 5 : " The Devil can wrestle but he can
not conquer ; for if you resist him he will flee from
you in confusion." James iv. 7. Ibtd^ 5: "Rather
fear the Lord, who is able both to save and to de-
stroy." James iv. 12. Vision, ill. 9 : " See to it, there-
fore, ye who glory in your riches, lest they groan who
are in want, and their groaning ascend to the Lord,
and ye be shut out with your goods beyond the gate
of the tower." James v. 1-4.
Irenaeus^ ad Haer. iv. 16. He shows that Abraham
himself was justified without circumcision and without
the observance of the Sabbath. Abraham believed
God and it was counted to him for righteousness, and
he was called the friend of God," James ii. 23. 13 :
"Abraham was made the friend of God."
AtharumuSj ad Serap. 1. "But with God, says
James, there is no variableness neither shadow of turn-
ing." James i. 17. Cont. Arium. Or. 3 : "As James the
apostle taught saying, Of His own will begat he us
with the word of truth." James i. 18.
Clement of Alexandria, Strom, iii. "And so he
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called him (Abraham) His friend." James ii. 23. Ibid:
" But the Scripture says to them, God resisteth the
proud and giveth grace to the humble." James iL 6.
TertuUtan^ De Orat. c. 8. " But far be it from the
Lord that He should seem to tempt, as if He were
ignorant of his faith." James i 13. "Whence was
Abraham reputed the friend of God, if not from
equity and righteousness of natural law ? " James iL 23.
Ortgen^ Comment, in John xix. "For if it may
even be called faith, yet it may be without works, but
faith of this kind is dead, as we read in the epistle
which is circulated under the name of James."
Comment, in Ep. ad Rom. iv. : " Hear also James, the
brother of the Lord, . . . when he says, he who will
be the friend of this world, is the enemy of God."
James iv. 4 Ibid: "And finally James the apostle
says this, Resist the Devil and he will flee from you ;
draw nigh to God and he will draw nigh to you."
James iv. 7, 8. Ibtd^ " So also James the apostle
says, every good gift and every perfect gift is from
above, and cometh down from the Father of lights."
James i 17. In Psalm 30: "And in James, as the
body without the Spirit is dead." In Ps. 36 : "For it
is an apostle who says, in many things we all offend,
and if any man offend not in word, he is a perfect
man." James iii. 2. Select. Exod: " Wherefore it is
said, God is not tempted of evil."
Epiphanms^ Haer. xxxi "And, again, St James
speaks concerning such teaching, that it is not the wis-
dom that cometh from above, but is earthly, sensual,
devilish. But the wisdom which is from above is first
pur«, then peaceable, gentle and easy to be entreated,
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full of mercy and good fruits." etc; James iil 17. Ihid^
Ixxvii. : ^'According as it is written, pure religion be-
fore God and the father is this, to visit the fatherless
and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself un-
spotted from the world." i 27.
Jerome^ CataL Script EccL c. 2. ** James, who is
called the brother of the Lord, and by snmame the
Just . • . after the passion of the Lord was or-
dained by the apostles bishop of Jerusalem, wrote only
one epistle, which is of the seven Catholic epistles."
As Eusebius expresses some doubts as to the epistle
of James, we here present in one view both his own
testimony and that which he has selected from others,
as we have done in regard to the epistfe to the He-
brews, and for the same reason.
(Kirchhofer, p. 264-66, 62.)
In Psalm : " For the holy apostle says, Is any afflicted
among you, let him pray ; is any merry, let him sing
praises." Dem. Evang. iii. 5 : ''Afterwards James, the
brother of our Lord, who was of those that formerly
dwelt at Jerusalem, and was called the Just on account
of the excellence of his virtue, being interrogated by
the high priest and the magistrates of the Jewish na-
tion as to what opinion he had concerning Christ, when
he answered plainly, that he was the Son of God, they
put him to death by stmiing.
E. H. i. 12: from Clement of Alexandria. "The
names of our Saviour's apostles are suflBciently obvi-
ous to every one, from his Gospels ; but of the seventy
disciples, no catalogue is given anywhere. Barnabas,
indeed is said to have been one of them, of whom
there is distinguished notice in the Acts of the Apos-
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THB SEVEN CATHOLIC EPISTLES. 397
ties ; and also in St. Paurs epistle to the Galatians.
Sosthenes, who sent letters with Paul to the Corinthi-
ans, is said to have been one of these. Clement, in
the fifth of his Hypotyposes or Institutions, in which
he also mentions Cephas, of whom Paul also says, that
he came to Antioch, and "that he withstood him to his
face ;" — says, that one who had the same name with
Peter the Apostle, was one of the seventy ; and that
Matthias, who was numbered with the apostles in place
of Judas, and he who had been honoured to be a can-
didate with him, is ^so said to have been deemed
worthy of the same calling with the seventy. They
also say that Thaddeus was one of them ; concerning
whom, I shall presently relate a narrative that has
come down to us. Moreover, if any one observe with
attention, he will find more disciples of our Saviour
than the seventy, on the testimony of Paul, who says,
that "he appeared after his resurrection, first to Cephas,
then to the twelve, and after these to five hundred
brethren at once." Of whom, he says, "some are
fallen asleep," but the greater part were living at the
time he wrote. Afterwards, he says, he appeared to
James ; he, however, was not merely one of these dis-
ciples of our Saviour, but he was one of his brethren.
Lastly, when beside these, there still was a considerable
number who were apostles in imitation of the twelve,
stich as Paul himself was, he adds, saying "afterwards
he appeared to all the apostles."
E. H. ii. 1. Then also James, called the brother of
our Lord, becMue he is also called the son of Joseph*
For Joseph was esteemed the father of Christ, because
tike VirgiH being' betrol&ed to him, "she was found
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with child by the Holy Ghost before they came to-
gether," as the narrative of the Holy Gospels shows.
This James, therefore, whom the ancients, on account
of the excellence of his virtue, sumamed the Just, was
the first that received the episcopate of the church at
Jerusalem. But Clement, in the sixth book of his In-
stitutions, represents it thus : "Peter, and James, and
John, after the ascension of our Saviour, though they
had been preferred by our Lord, did not contend for
the honour, but chose James the Just as bishop of Je-
rusalem." And the same author, in the seventh book
of the same work, writes thus: *'The Lord imparted
the gift of knowledge to James the Just, to John and
Peter after his resurrection, these delivered it to the
rest of the apostles, and they to the seventy, of whom
Barnabas wets one. There were, however, two Jameses ;
one called the Just, who was thrown from a wing of
the temple, and beaten to death with a fuller's club,
and another, who was beheaded. Paul also makes
mention of the Just in his epistles. "But other of the
apostles," says he, "saw I none, save James the broth-
er of our Lord."
E. H. ii 23. After giving from the ancients a minute
account of the acts and martyrdom of James, he con-
cludes as follows : " These accounts are given respect-
ing James, who is said to have written the first of the
epistles general, (catholic ;) but it is to be observed
that some consider it spurious. Not many indeed of
the ancients have mentioned it, and not even that call-
ed the epistle of Jude, which is also one of the seven
called catholic epistles. Nevertheless we know, that
these, with the rest, are publicly used in most of the
churches."
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THE FIRST EPISTLE OF PETER.
Peter was among the first, and most zealous of the
twelve apostles of Christ, (John i. 43-45, Matt iv. 18,
xviiL 2) ; and after the resurrection, took a leading part
in the formation and guidance of the Christian Church,
being the first to form a church out of the Jewish com-
munity, and the first to admit the Gentiles also with-
out requiring of them circumcision. (Acts i-xi). After
his miraculous deliverance from prison by the help of
the angel, he left Jerusalem, (Acts xii. ), and does not
appear again till the council was called at Jerusalem to
consider the case of the Gentile converts, (Acts xv.),
where he decidedly took the liberal side. We are in-
formed by the apostle Paul, that he afterwards at An-
tioch pelded again for a while to his Jewish preju-
dices, and brought upon himself in consequence a
sharp rebuke. (Col. ii). He was the apostle to the
Jews mainly, as Paul was to the Gentiles. His field of
labor was principally in the East, he directs his epistle
to the Christians of the East, (1 Pet. i. 1), and dates
it from Babylon the old Chaldean metropolis. (1 Pet.
V. 13). There is no reason for understanding the word
Babylon here in any other than its literal sense. It is
only the anxiety of some to give Peter a long resi-
dence at Rome, that ever imagined here a spiritual
Babylon, that is Rome.
It is sufficiently attested by Christian antiquity that
Peter visited Rome, preached there, and there suflfer-
ed martyrdom ; but that he ever made any long stay
in that city, or ever saw it till quite the latter part of
his life, does not appear. Indeed a careful inspection
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of the narrative in Acts and of the epistles of Paul to
the Romans, leads us inevitably to the conclusion that
he did not visit Rome till after that epistle was written.
This whole subject is very ably and satisfactorily dis-
cussed by Prof. Tholuck in the introduction to his
commentary on Romans.
There are no sufficient data for assigning the date
of this epistle. It was probably written after Peter's
first missionary tour though the East, and before Paul
to the Romans, perhaps as early as A. D. 55 or 58.
The epistle is full of Christian love and sympathy,
wholly of a practical nature, and so miscellaneous in
its character as scarcely to be susceptible of a logical
analysis, nor is such an analysis necessary to guide
the reader in the study of it
Aft;er a reference to the blessed ftiture which awaits
the true Christian, (i 3-12), he exhorts believers to a
pure and holy life worthy of their calling, (i, 14, ii. 12),
especially to an observance of all their civil, social,
and domestic duties, (ii 13, iii. 12), and in view of
the sufferings and death of Christ to bear patiently the
slanders and persecutions to which they were subject-
ed, (iii 13, it. 19). Finally, particular exhortations
to elders and private Christians, (v. 1-9), together
with concluding greetings, (v. 10^14).
The genuineness of the epistle has always been ad-
mitted, and the testimonies to it are uniform from the
very beginning.
TESTIMONIES TO L PETSB.
Clement of B&me. "Love hideth a multitude of
sina 1 Pet. iv. 8.
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Pastor Hermas. Via x. 2. "Cast your cares on
the Lord and he will direct them." 1 Pet v. 9.
Polycarp. Ad Philip, c. 1. "In whom, not seeing,
ye believe, and believing ye rejoice with joy unspeak-
able and full of glory." 1 Pet. i 8. Ihid. c. 2.
"Wherefore girding up your loins, serve God in fear
and truth, believing in Him who raised up our Lord
Jesus Christ from the dead, and gave him glory and
a seat at His right hand." Pet L 13, 21. Ihid. c. 10.
"Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles,
that you may have praise for your good works and the
Lord be not blasphemed." 1 Pet ii 12. Ihid. c. 8.
"Let us therefore unwaveringly persevere in our hope
and in the earnest of our righteousness, which is Christ
Jesus, who bore our sins in his own body on the tree,
who did not sin neither was guile found in his mouth,
but on our account and that we might live in him, en-
dured all things ; wherefore let us be imitators of his
patience, and if we suffer on account of his name, we
glorify him." 1 Pet ii 21-24 Ihid. c. 2. "Not ren-
dering evil for evil nor cursing for cursing." 1 Pet
111. 9.
"Who comes the judge of quick and dead." 1 Pet
iv. 5. c. 7. "Watching unto prayer." 1 Pet iv. 7.
c. 10. "*Be ye all subject one to another." 1 Pet v. 5.
Emebiua. E. H. iv. 14 "Polycarp, indeed, in his
epistle to the Philipians which is extant, uses testimo-
nies from the first epistle to Peter."
Papiaa. Eusebius E. H. iii 39. "Papias uses testi-
monies taken from the first epistle of Peter."
Letter to Diognetua. "He gave his own son a ran-
som for us, the just for the unjust" 1 Pet iii 13.
2C
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Letters of the Ghurcheaof Yienne and Lyons. Euseb.
E. H. V. 2. "They humbled themselves under the
mighty hand by which they are now powerfiilly exalt-
ed." 1 Pet. V. 6.
Irenaeua. iv. 9. "Peter says in his epistle, whom
not seeing ye love, in whom, not seeing him now, ye
believe, and rejoice with joy unspeakable." 1 Pet. L 8.
16. "On this account Peter says, have not your liber-
ty as a cloak of maliciousness." 1 Pet. iL 16.
Clement of Alexandria. Strom, iv. "But if ye suf-
fer for righteousness sake, says Peter, happy are ye,
and be not afraid of their terror, neither be troubled ;
but sanctify the Lord God in your hearts ; and be
ready always to give an . answer to every man that
asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you, with
meekness and fear. Having a good conscience ; that,
whereas they speak evil of you, as of evil-doers, they
may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conver-
sation in Christ For it is better, if the will of God
be so, that ye suffer for well-doing, than for evil-doing."
1 Pet. iii. 14-17. Paed. L "And so Peter also says,
wherefore laying aside all malice, and all guile, and
hypocrisies, and envies, and all evil speakings, as new-
born babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that
ye may grow thereby : if so be ye have tasted that
Christ is the Lord." 1 Pet ii. 1-3.
Tertullian. Scorpiac. c. 12. "Indeed Peter says to
them of Pontus, How great is the glory, if ye bear it,
when ye are punished not as delinquents. For this is
grace and in this ye were called." 1 Pet i 21. c. 14.
*' Peter says the king is to be honored."
Origen. Comment in Matth. xv. "From the first
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THE SEVEN CATHOLIC EPISTLES. 403
epistle of Peter Peter says, in whom, that is
Christ, though now ye see him not, yet believing ye
rejoice." 1 Pet i. 8.
De Princip. 2. " They do not read what is written
concerning the hope of those who were taken off by
the flood, concerning which hope Peter says in his
first epistle, Christ indeed was put to death in the
flesh, but quickened in the spirit: By which also
he went and preached unto the spirits in prison ; which
sometime were disobedient, when once the long-suffer-
ing of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark
was a preparing, wherein few, that is, eight souls, were
saved by water." 1 Pet. iii. 18-20. On Psalm third
Origen again quotes the same passage at length.
Comment in Joan, vi "And concerning that jour-
ney in the spirit to the prison, in the catholic epistle,
with Peter, put to death he says in the flesh, but made
aJive in the spirit"
Cyprian. De bon. pat. "Peter also on whom in
the estimation of the Lord the church is founded, de-
clares in his epistle, Christ also suffered for us, leaving
us an example, that we should follow his steps: Who
did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth :
Who, when he was reviled, reviled not again ; when
he suffered, he threatened not ; but committed himself
to him that judgeth righteously." * 1 Pet ii. 21-23.
Epist 58. "Peter also the apostle taught that persecu-
tions would be experienced, in order that we might
be proved for he states in his epistle saying,
Beloved, think it not strange, concerning the fiery trial
which is to try you, as though some strange thing hap-
pened unto you : but rejoice, inasmuch as ye are par-
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takers of Christ's suflTerings ; that when his glory shall
be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy.
If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy
are ye ; for the Spirit of glory and of God resteth up-
on you. On their part he is evil syoken of, but on
your part he is glorified." 1 Pet. iv. 12-14.
Eusehiua. H. E. iii. 4. "And also in what provin-
ces Peter, preaching Christ to those of the circum-
cision, delivered to them the doctrine of the new cov-
enant, may be clearly ascertained from that epistle,
which, as I have said, is by all and without 9ontroversy
ascribed to him, which he writes to those of the He-
brews who are dispersed through Pontus, Galatia, Cap-
padocia, Asia and Bithynia."
Athanasiua^ Epist. ad Scrap. "Peter also writes,
receiving the end of your faith, even the salvation of
your souls. Of which salvation the prophets have in-
quired and searched diligently, who prophesied of the
grace that should come unto you : Searching what, or
what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was
in them did signify, when it testified beforehand the
sufierings of Christ, and the glory that should follow."
1 Pet. i 9-11.
IJpiphannis. vii. "For says the Scripture, Christ
suffered for us in the flesh ; and again, being put to
death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit." 1 Pet.
iv. 1, iii. 18.
Jerome. Catal. Script. 1. "Simon Peter wrote
two epistles, which are called catholic, of which the
second is by many doubted, on account of its diver-
sity in style from the first."
Epist 120. "And finally the two epistles which are
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THE SEVEN CATHOLIC EPISTLES. 405
called Peter's axe diverse in style and character and
the structure of words ; from which we may under-
stand that he made use of different interpreters, ac-
cording to the exigencies in different circumstan-
cea"
Ibid^ E. H. V. 1. "A wonderful interposition of
God was then exhibited, and the boundless mercy of
Christ clearly displayed, a thing that had rarely happen-
ed among the brethren, but by no means beyond the
reach of the skill of Christ For those that had fallen
from the faith on the first seizure, were also themselves
imprisoned, and shared in the sufferings of the rest
This renunciation did them no good at this time, but
those that confessed what they really were, were im-
prisoned as Christians ; no other charge being alleged
against them. But these, at last, were confined as
murderers and guilty culprits, and were punished with
twice the severity of the rest The former, indeed,
were refreshed by the joy of martyrdom, the hope of
the promises, Ihe love of Christ, and the spirit of the
Father ; but the latter were sadly tormented by their
own conscience. So that the difference was obvious
to all in their very countenances, when they were led
forth. For the one went on joyful, much glory and
grace being mixed in their faces, so that their bonds
seemed to form noble ornaments, and, like those of a
bride, adorned with various golden bracelets, and im-
pregnated with the sweet odour of Christ, they ap-
peared to some anointed with earthly perfumes. But
the others, with downcast look, dejected, sad, and cov-
ered with every kind of shame, in addition to this,
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were reproached by the heathen as mean and cowardly,
bearing the charge of murderers, and losing the hon-
ourable, glorious^ and life-giving appellation of Chris-
tians. The rest, however, seeing these eflFects, were
so much the more confirmed, and those that were
taken immediately, confessed, not even admitting
the thought suggested by diabolical objections." In-
troducing some further remarks they again proceed :
*After these things their martyrdom was finally distri-
buted into various kinds ; for platting and constituting
one crown of various colours and all kinds of flowers,
they offer it to the Father. It was right, indeed, that
these noble wrestlers, who had sustained a diversified
contest, and come off with a glorious victory, should
bear away the great crown of immortality.' " 1 Peter
iv. 13-16.
THE SECOND EPISTLE OF PETER.
This epistle claims most distinctly to have been
written by the apostle Peter, the author of the first
epistle, and that too in near view of death, the death
of a martyr (i. 1, 14-18, iii. 1, 13). The whole tone
and bearing of the epistle are in exact accordance
with this claim. Its sentiment is elevated, pure, sweety
Christ-like, most admirably appropriate to the position
claimed, and scarcely equaled in the Bible itself except
by the address of Paul to Timothy in like circumstan-
ces. Read the words i. 14-18 : " Yea, I think it meet,
as long as I am in this tabernacle, to stir you up by
putting you in remembrance ; knowing that shortly I
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must put off this ibj tabernacle, eVen as our Lord
Jesus Christ hath shewed me. Moreover I will en-
deavor that ye may be able after my decease to have
these things always in remembrance. For we have
not followed cunningly devised fables, when we made
known unto you the power and coming of our Lord
Jesus Christ, but were eye-witnesses of his majesty.
For he received from God the Father honor and
glory, when there came such a voice to him from the
excellent glory, This is my beloved son, in whom I
am weU pleased. And this voice which came from
heaven we heard, when we were with him in the holy
mount" And compare the utterances of Paul. 2 Tim.
iv. 6-8.
To me it seems utterly impossible that a man who
was practicing a deliberate and conscious imposture
could feel or give utterance to sentiments like these.
The internal evidence of genuineness, from this source
alone, is morally irresistible. The internal evidence
also from the peculiar use of single words in the two
epistles is thoroughly convincing. Though both epis-
tles are very short, yet there are striking peculiarities
of language the same in both, which occur nowhere
else, or but very seldom in all the New Testament.
For example the word cmoOea^g (wpotheais) is found in
1 Pet. iii. 21, and 2 Pet. i. 14, in the same sense, and
nowhere else in all the New Testament So the word
o^n (arete) occurs in 1 Pet ii. 9, and 2 Pet i. 3, 5, and
but once besides in all the New Testament The word
aaniloq (asptlos)^ 1 Pct i. 19, and 2 Pet iii 14, and only
twice besides in all the New Testament. Again the
word araat^oq^^ (mostrophe) occurs six times in the
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first of Peter, twice in the second of Peter, and only
once besides in each of the following epistles, to wit,
James, 1 Tim., Eph. and Gal. In ordinary cases these
facts alone would be deemed sufficient to establish the
identity of authorship.
As to the diflference of style of which Jerome speaks,
it is only such a diflference and exactly such a diflfer-
ence as we should expect in an apostle in the fuU vigor
of his life and apostleship, and the same apostle at the
close of his career and in the daily expectation of mar-
tyrdom ; and the same diflference which we find be-
tween the second of Timothy and the epistle to the
Romans.
Several causes contributed to render its reception in
the ancient churches later than that of the first epistle.
1. It was addressed mainly to obscure churches,
remote fi:om the great lines of communication, in a
region strongly suspected of heresy (Euseb. E. H. vi.
20), and so near the time of the apostle's death that
it did not have the advantage of his personal presence
and authority.
2. It related to a state of things which was not fully
developed till sometime after the epistle was written.
That which in the epistle of Jude is history, is in 2
Pet. ii. prediction ; in Peter the verbs are in the future
tense, in Jude they are in the past tense ; Peter utters
the prophecy and Jude records the fiilfillment of the
prophecy. This one fact of itself is decisive of the
relation as to time between Jude and 2 Peter. Com-
pare 2 Pet. ii. 1-3 and Jude vs. 4, 8, 10-13, 16, 19,
22, 23.
The time of writing was near the apostle's death,
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the place wholly uncertain as there are no data to
fix it.
The course of thought is as follows :
The apostle, after a brief introduction and an ethical
exhortation, speaks of the certainty of the Christian
doctrine and its confirmation especially by the trans-
figuration of Christ on the mountain and the divine
voice, which he had seen and heard, and also by the
prophecies of the Old Testament (i.). He then speaks
of the teachers of error who would afterwards arise
(ii). He then gives assurance that notwithstanding
the vain talk of those " whose great principle it is that
all things continue as they were, and who scorn the
notion of the great God ever coming to touch the
orderly mechanism of the universe " — the time will
come for a miraculous dissolution and reconstruction
of the whole present system of things, though, since
one day is with the Lord as a thousand years and a
thousand years as one day, we have no ground for
affirming anything as to the nearness or remoteness of
that great event, thus joining with the apostle Paul
(2 Thess. ii) in rebuking those presumptuous teachers,
not divinely inspired, who even in that age insisted on
the immediate advent of Christ as necessary to the
fulfillment of prophecy.
TESTIMONIES TO IL PETER.
Clement of Rome^ ad Cor. i. 7, 1 1. " Noah preached
repentance ; and as many as barkened to him were
saved. Noah, being proved to be faithful, did by his
ministry preach regeneration to the world ; and the
Lord saved by him all the living creatures, that went
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with one accord together into the ark. By hospitality
and godliness was Lot saved out of Sodom, when all
the country round about was destroyed by fire and
brimstone : the Lord thereby making it manifest, that
he will not forsake those that trust in him ; but will
bring the disobedient to punishment and correction.
For his wife, who went out with him, being of a
di£ferent mind, and not continuing in the same obedi-
ence, was for that reason set forth for an example,
being turned into a pillar of salt unto this day/^ 2 Pet
ii. 5 ff.
Shepherd of Hermae^ Via iii 7. " There are those
who believed, but by their hesitation forsook the true
way." 2 Pet. ii. 15. iv. 3 : "Ye are they who escape
from this world." 2 Pet. ii 20.
Justin Martyr^ Dial. p. 303. " We know the say-
ing, one day is with the Lord as a thousand years,
pertaining to this." 2 Pet. iii. 8.
Theophilus^ ad AutoL ii. "But men of God, full
of the Holy Spirit, and inspired by God, were ap-
pointed prophets, and were taught of God, holy and
righteous." 2 Pet. i. 10.
Origen^ Comment, in Epist. ad Rom. viii. "And
Peter says in his epistle, Grace and peace be multiplied
unto you in the knowledge of God — and again, As
good stewards of the manifold grace of God." 2 Pet
L 2, 1 Pet. iv. 10. Hom. in Levit. iv. : "And again Pe-
ter says, Ye are made partakers of the divine nature.**
2 Pet. i. 4. Hom. in Num. xiii. : " As the Scripture
also says in the passage, The dumb animal, speaking
with a human voice, rebuked the madness of the
prophet." 2 Pet. ii. 16. Hom. in Exod. xu. : "For I
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THE SEVEN CATHOLIC EPISTLES. 411
know it is written, of whom any one is overcome, of
the same is he brought into bondage." 2 Pet. ii. 19.
Dial de rect. Fide, ii : "But the apostle is mentioned
by Peter, according to the wisdom, he says, given to
my brother Paul." 2 Pet. iil 15.
Firmilicmua^ Ep. ad Cyp. 7&. " Defaming the blessed
apostles Peter and Paul, .... who in their epistles
execrated the heretics, and admonished us to avoid
them." 2Petii
Athanaaius^ Dial, de Sac. Trin. i. "And it is written
in the Catholic epistles, whereby are given unto us ex-
ceeding great and precious promises, that ye may be
made partakers of the divine nature." 2 Pet. i. 4.
Cont Arian. Orat. ii. : "And this is what Peter says,
that ye may be made partakers of the divine nature."
2 Pet. i. 4.
Epiphanivs^ Haer. Ixvi. "Which Peter indicates
in his epistle by these words. Giving heed to the pro-
phetic word as unto a light that shineth in a dark place,
until the day dawn, and the daystar arise in your
hearts." 2 Pet. i 19.
Jerome. See testimonies to 1 Peter.
Melito. "At another time there was a flood of water,
and the just were preserved in an ark of wood by the
ordinance of God. So also it will be at the last time ;
there will be a flood of fire and the earth shall be
burned up, . . . and the just shall be delivered from
the fray, like their fellows in the ark from the waters
of the deluge." 2 Pet iii. 5, 6, 10-12. Home's Introd.
iv. p. 606, tenth edition.
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THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN.
There is no reasonable doubt, there never has been
any, that the first epistle ascribed to John in the New
Testament, is a genuine production of that apostle and
evangelist. The internal evidence is conclusive, and
the external testimony unanimous and uncontradicted.
If we have evidence that the Tusculan Questions be-
long to Cicero, we have evidence still stronger (if pos-
sible) that this epistle belongs to the bosom friend of
Jesus. It is true that the passage v. 7, is not found in
any of the early Greek manuscripts of the New Tes-
tament, and we may admit it to be an interpolation
without any prejudice to the integrity of the epistle.
There is no internal evidence against the passage, it is
quite in place where it stands, it is quite in the style
and manner of John ; but there is a lack of external
testimony in its favor ; and on all such questions the
internal and external must co-operate to produce a
decision.
There are no data to determine positively the time or
place of writing or the particular persons to whom the
epistle was at first addressed ; but all the probabilities
are that it was written at Ephesus after the publication
of the Gospel, consequently at a late period of life, and
addressed especially to the churches with which he
was personally conversant in Asia Minor and the
vicinity. It is full of the loveliness of the Gospel, and
while the Boanerges is clearly seen in its pages, the
predominating qualities are clearly those which made
John the disciple whom Jesus loved.
According to one of the most eminent of the mod-
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HE SEVEN CATHOLIC EPISTLES. 413
em commentators on John, after the introduction (i.
1-4), there are two principal sections, each pervaded
by a single master-thought, and both tending to illus-
trate the leading subject of the whole, to wit, fellow-
ship with God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ
1, The theme (i. 5-iL 28) is, God is light. 2. God is
righteous (ii 29-v. 5). 3. The conclusion, Jesus is
the Son of God and the eternal Life.
TESTIMONIES TO THE FIRST EPISTLE OP JOHN.
Ignatius^ ad Magnes. c. 6. " Being intrusted with
the ministry of Jesus Christ, who before the ages was
with the Father and in the end was manifested.'^
1 John i. 2.
Polycarp^ ad Phil. c. 7. " For every one who doth
not confess that Jesus Christ hath come in the flesh is
anti-Christ." 1 John iv. 3.
Papiaa^ Euseb. H. E. iii. 39. "He used testimonies
taken from the first epistle of John." Papias, it will
be remembered, was a pupil of John himself.
Epistle to DiognetuB. " For God loved men ....
to whom He sent His only begotten Son, to whom also
He promised the kingdom in heaven, and to those who
love Him will He give it How greatly should
you love Him who first so loved you ! " 1 John iv. 9.
Irenaeus^ iii 16. "Because that John also testified
to us in his epistle. Little children, it is the last time ;
and as ye have heard that antichrist shall come, even
now are there many antichrists; whereby we know
that it is the last time. They went out from us, but
they were not of us ; for if they had been of us,
they would no doubt have continued with us: but
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they went out, that they might be made manifest that
they were not all of us. Wherefore know that every
lie is extraneous and is not of the truth. Who is a liar
but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ ? He is
antichrist, that denieth the Father and the Son." "And
again he says in the epistle. Many false prophets are
gone out into the world. In this know the Spirit of
God. Every spirit which confesseth that Jesus Christ
has come in the flesh, is of God. And every spirit
which says Jesus is not of God, is of antichrist."
1 John iv. 1-3. " Wherefore he again says in his epis-
tle, Every one who believeth that Jesus is the Christ,
is born of God." 1 John v. 1. Euseb. H. E. v. 8 : "He
also (Irenaeus) makes mention of the first epistle of
John, bringing very many testimonies from it."
Clement of Alexandria^ Paed. iii. " But this is the
love of God, says John, that we keep his command-
ments, . . . and his commandments are not grievous."
1 John V. 3. Strom, ii. : " John also appears in his
larger epistle, teaching the differences of sins in these
words. If any one seeth his brother sinning a sin which
is not unto death, he may pray and he will give him
life. He says to those sinning not unto death, For
there is a sin unto death. He does not say that any
one should pray concerning that" 1 John v. 16.
Tertullian^ Scorp. c. 12. "But John exhorts that
we should lay down our lives for the brethren, denying
that there is any fear in love." 1 John iii. 16, iv. 18.
Adv. Prax. c. 15 : "And finally let us look upon him
whom the apostle saw. What we have seen, says John,
what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes
and our hands have handled of the word of life, for the
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THE SEVEN CATHOLIO EPISTLES. 415
word was made flesh." 1 John i. 1. c. 26 : Which
three are one (unum)^ not one person (unus) ; as it
is said, I and the Father are one (unum)^ as to unity
of substance not as to singleness of number." 1 John
V. 7, 8.
Ortffen^ De Orat. "As John says in the catholic epis-
tle, he is of the Devil, for the Devil sinneth from the
beginning." 1 John iii. 8. Comment in Evan. Joan,
xix • " John in the Catholic epistle saying these things,
he that denieth the Father denieth also the Son ; for
every one who denieth the Son, neither hath he the
Father." 1 John ii. 22. ii : " But in the Catholic epis-
tle of John himself it is said, God is light."
Cyprtan^ Epist. 28. "And the apostle John ....
in his epistle says. In this we understand that we know
Him, if we keep His commandments. He who says
that he knows Him, and keeps not His commandments,
is a liar, and the truth is not in him." 1 John ii. 3, 4.
Epist. 69 : "And also John the blessed apostle, . . .
Ye have heard that Anti-Christ cometh, and now there
are many Anti-Christs, whence we know it is the last
time. They went out from us, but they were not of
us: if they had been of us, they would no doubt have
remained with us." 1 Johnii. 18, 19. De Bon. Pat. :
"As John the apostle teaches, he who says he
abides in Christ ought himself to walk as He also
walked." 1 Johnii. 6.
Athanaazus, Cont. Ar. Orat. 6. " But that the Son
did not have beginning of existence, but was always
in the Father before He became man, the apostle John
declares, saying in his first epistle, That which was
from the beginning, which we have heard, which w^
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have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon,
and our hands have handled, of the Word of life;
for the life was manifested, and we have seen it, and
bear witness, and shew unto you that eternal life which
was with the Father, and was manifested unto ua
Epist. ad Scrap. : "And John writes in his epistle, by
this we know that we abide in Him, and He in ua, be-
cause He has given unto us of His Spirit" 1 John
iiL24.
THE SECOND AND THIRD EPISTLES OF JOHN.
These two letters are very short, they are addressed
to private individuals, and are not of any particular
dogmatic interest They were therefore late in getting
into circulation as a part of the New Testament Scrip-
tures, the ancient church exercising great caution on
this subject, as we see in the example of 2 Peter.
Eventually they were universally acknowledged.
The second epistle is addressed to a Christian woman
by the name of Kuria or Latinzed Cyria. It is a
mistake in the English translation to render this word
lady. The epistle begins, Tlie Elder to the elect Oyria
and her children^ whom I love in the truth; exactly as
the third epistle begins. The Elder to the beloved Gaivs
whom I love in the truth. Both introductions are ex-
ceedingly characteristic of the apostle John, who here
styles himself elder^ just as Peter does (1 Pet v. 1.), on
account of his advanced age and his position in the
church. Who this Cyria was we have now no means
of ascertaining ; but John exhorts her to persevere in
Q^iristian charity and to beware of false ^teachers, and
gives her the. hope of soon receiving a visit fix)m him.
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THE SEVEN CATHOLIC EPISTLES. 417
Of Gaius he commends the hospitality, warns him
against Diotrephes and commends to him Demetrius.
There is a Gaius mentioned by Paul (Rom. xvi 23, com-
pare 1 Cor. i. 14) as the entertainer of himself and the
whole church at Corinth, and therefore a very hospita-
ble person, and the name also occurs in Acts xix. 29
and XX. 4 ; but there is no certainty whether any of
these were the Gains to whom John wrote. There is
an ancient ' tradition that this Gaius was a personal
friend of the apostle, who brought his Gospel from the
island of Patmos to the churches. Gaius is the same
name as Caius.
TESTIMONIES TO THE BECOIH) AND THIRB EPISTLES OF JOHN.
Irenaeus^ iii. 16. "And John his disciple, in the
aforesaid epistle, commands that we should avoid them,
saying. For many deceivers are entered into the world,
who confess not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh.
This is a deceiver and an antichrist Look to your-
selves that ye lose not those things which ye have
wrought." 2 John 7, 8. i. 16 : '' For John, the disci-
pie of the Lord, pronounces a curse upon them, and
wills not that we should bid them God speed, saying,
Whoever bids them God speed is a partaker of their
evil dieeds." 2 John 4.
Clement of Alexandria^ ad Numb. "The second
epistle of John, which is the most simple, is written
to virgins."
Euaehiua^ Dem. Evang. iii. 5. "And John also you
will find like to Matthew, for in his epistle he does not
mention his own name, but calls himself the elder^
never the apostle or evangelist. And in the: Gospel
27
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when he speaks of the disciple whom Jesus loved, he
does not reveal himself by name.
I!piphantu8j xxxiv. "But John, the disciple of
Christ, condemns them with a greater punishment,
when he does not suffer us even to salute them, for who-
ever, says he, bids them God speed, is a partaker of
their evil deeds." 2 John 4.
Jerome^ Epist Evang. " The son of thunder, whom
Jesus especially loved, who drank streams of doctrine
from the breast of the Saviour, sounds with the Gos-
pel trumpet. The Elder to the woman elect of the Lord^
etc., and in the other epistle. The Elder to Caius.
THE EPISTLE OF JIJDE.
Jude was the brother of James, the author of the
first Catholic epistle, who presided over the church at
Jerusalem for many years ; and consequently he was
a younger son of Mary the mother of Jesus. A very
interesting incident respecting his grandsons is pre-
served to us by Eusebius (E. H. iii. 20), from the his-
torian Hegesippus :
" There were yet living of the family of our Lord,
the grandchildren of Judas, called the brother of our
Lord, according to the flesh. These were reported as
being of the family of David, and were brought to
Domitian by the Evocatus. For this emperor was as
much alarmed at the appearance of Christ as Herod.
He put the question, whether they were of David's
race, and they confessed that they were. He then
asked them what property they had, or how much
money they owned. And both of them answered,
that they had between them only nine thousand dena-
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THE SEVEN CATHOLIC EPISTLES. 419
rii,* and this they had not in silver, but in the value
of a piece of land, containing only thirty nine acres ;
from which they raised their taxes and supported them-
selves by their own labour. Then they also began to
show their hands, exhibiting the hardness of their
bodies, and the callosity formed by incessant labour
on their hands, as evidence of their own labour.
When asked also, respecting Christ and his kingdom,
what was its nature, and when and where it was to
appear, they replied, ' that it was not a temporal nor
an earthly kingdom, but celestial and angelic ; that it
would appear at the end of the world, when coming
in glory he would judge the quick and dead, and give
to every one according to his works.' Upon which,
Domitian despising them, made no reply ; but treating
them with contempt, as simpletons, commanded them
to be dismissed, and by a decree ordered the persecu-
tion to cease. Thus delivered they ruled the churches,
both as witnesses and relatives of the Lord. When
peace was established, they continued living even to
the time of Trajan. Such is the statement of He-
gesippus."
But little is known of the life and labors of Jude.
The epistle must have been written at a late ^ period,
for he mentions as historical facts already occurring,
what Peter, in his second epistle, had predicted as still
future at the time when he was writing (2 Pet ii). .
The late date of the epistle and the fact that not much
was known in the great body of the churches respect-
ing its author, were probably the reasons why it was
slow in coming into universal use ; though it was very
* About 1500 dollars.
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420 THE BOOE£( OF THE BIBLE.
generally acknowledged at quite an early period, as
will be seen in the testimonies. The author, in 9,
14, 15, refers to matters not on record in any of the
canonical books of Scripture, and which, probably,
like the names of Jannes and Jambres (2 TiuL iii 3),
had been preserved till that time by tradition. It ia
true that the passage in 14, 15, is found in our
present book of Enoch ; but as this book was not com
pleted in the form in which we now have it till aftei
this epistle was written, it is probable that Enoch quotes
from Jude rather than Jude from Enoch.
After a brief introduction (1-3) the author proceeds
to expose the corrupt., blasphemous and wicked men,
teachers of error and panderers to vice, who had crept
into the churches (3-19), and concludes with the ex-
hortation and the expression of the hope that his read-
ers would persevere in the right way, and be finally
received to the joys of the upper world (20-25).
TESTIMONIES TO THE EPISTLE OF JUDE.
Clement of Alexandria, Paed. ii. " Says Jude, For
I wish you to know how that the Lord, having saved
the people out of the land of Egypt, afterward de-
stroyed them that believed not And the angels which
kept not their first estate, but left their own habitata-
tion, he hath reserved in everlasting chains under
darkness unto the judgment of the great day. And
again, .... Woe unto them ! for they have gone in
the way of Cain, and run greedily after the error of
Balaam for reward, and perished in the gainsaying of
Core. These are spots in your feasts."
Strom, iii. " Concerning these and similar heresies
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THE SEVEN CATHOLIC EPISTLES. 421
1 think Jude spake prophetically in his epistle. Like-
wise also these filthy dreamers ^nd so on to this.
And their mouth speaketh proud thinga" Jude 1 6.
Adumb. in Ep. Jud. "Jude who wrote the Catholic
epistle, a brother of the sons of Joseph, being very
religious, when he knew his relationship to the Lord,
nevertheless he did not say that he was his brother,
but what said he ? Jude, a servant of Jesus Christ,
as of the Lord, but a brother of Jamea"
TertvlliaYL De Cult Tern. L 3. "Enoch has testi-
mony in the apostle Jude."
OrigeTL Comment, in Matth. L "Jude wrote an
epistle indeed of few verses, but filled with efl&cacious
words of heavenly grace, and says in the beginning,
Jude a servant of Jesus Christ, but the brother of
James."
XV. "And indeed many of the first heavenly beings
became last, being kept in eternal chains under dark-
ness for the judgm^t of the great day." Jude 6.
xiiL "And in the epistle of Jude,* to those who are
beloved in God the Father, and preserved and called
in Jesus Christ." Jude 1.
Comment in Eom. iii "And unless they had been
held by this law, the divine Scripture would never
have said concerning them, The angels also, who kept
not their principality, but left their own habitation,
hath God reserved, under darkness bound in Tartarus
with eternal chains, for the judgment of the great
day." vL v. "In what manner then can we explain
what the apostle Jude says in his Catholic epistle ?
For thus he speaks, The angels also, who kept not
their principality," etc.
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De Princip. iii. 2. " The apostle Jude in his epistle
says, Michael the archangel disputing with Satan con-
cerning the body of Moses." Jude 9.
Jerome. Catal. Script Eccl. c. 4. "Jude the broth-
er of James, left cu short epistle, which is of the seven
Catholic epistles."
Epiphanivs. xxvi. " As also I judge the Holy Spirit
was moved in regard to these things in the apostle
Jude, in the Catholic epistle, I say, which was written
by him. But this Jude is called the brother of James
and of the Lord."
THE APOCRYPHAL EPISTLEa
What are called the Apocryphal Epistles are for the
most part very different compositions from the Apoc-
ryphal Gospels and Acts, which have already been re-
viewed. Those are generally either spurious or anon-
ymous fictions and worthless, except as they occa-
sionally embody some early Cljpstian traditions not
elsewhere to be found. But these epistles are, as a
whole, the writings of the men whose names they
bear, good and useful men and honored teachers in
the church, the public companions of the apostles
themselves. Hence the more common and appropri-
ate designation of these books is, the writings of the
Apostolic Fathers. They bear somewhat the same
relation to the New Testament that such Apocryphal
books a 1 Maccabees, Jesus Sirach and Wisdom of
Solomon do to the Old. Though genuine they are
somewhat interpolated and corrupted, and the falling
off in tone and sentiment from the inspired to the un-
inspired must be obvious to the dullest reader. Com-
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THE APOCBTPHAL EPISTLES. 423
paxe Barnabas for example, the fellow-missionary of
Paul, or Hennas his personal friend, (Rom. xvi 14),
with the apostle himself; and it is seen at once how
wide the difference is between an inspired writer and
an uninspired writer, even of the same age and class.
We admit that the epistle of Barnabas is strongly in-
terpolated, and that the author of the Shepherd may
be a Hermas who lived at Biome three-quarters of a
century after Paul ; but even with this admission, the con-
trast between the words which man's wisdom teacheth
and the words which the Holy Ghost teacheth is suffi-
ciently marked and strong. It is difficult to conceive
how Irenaeus, a cotemporary of the second Hermas,
should ascribe this work to the first Hermas and speak
so very highly of it, if it had been a product of his
own day.
The writings referred to include the First Epistle of
Clement of Biome (Phil iv. 3) to the Corinthians, the
Epistle of Barnabas, the Epistle of Ignatius, the Epis-
tle of Polycarp, and the Shepherd of Hennas. These
persons and their works are all briefly described in the
Fourth Chapter of this Volume, to which the reader is
here referred. To these may be added the Epistles of
the Churches of Vienne and Lyons, and the epistle to
Diognetua
I select for the purposes of comparison with the
New Testament Epistles, the Epistle of Ignatius to the
Ephesians, the Epistle of Polycarp to the Philippians,
and the first Vision of Hermas. I take the shortest
recension of the Epistle of Ignatius, which beyond rea-
sonable doubt comes to us as Ignatius wrote it Let
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424 THJB BOOKS OF THE BIBLE.
the reader now, before proceeding further, turn to the
iv chapter and examine the paragraphs on Herman,
Ignatius, and Polycarp.
Hermas perhaps belongs more properly to the apoc-
alyptic than to the epistolary Apocrypha ; but I place
him here with Ignatius and Polycarp, and after James
and Peter, John and Jude, that the striking contrast
between the inspired and the uninq)ired, at the very
earliest period of the church, may be the more clearly
seen.
THE EPISTLE OF IGNATIUS TO THE BPHESIANa
Ignatius, who is also called Theophorus, to the
church which is at Ephesus in Asia ; most deservedly
happy ; being blessed through the greatness and ful-
ness of God the Father, and predestinated before the
world began, that it should be always unto an enduring
and unchangeable glory ; being janited and chosea
through his true passion, according to the will of the
Father, and Jesus Christ our God ; all happiness, by
Jesus Christ, and hisundefiled grace. I have heard of
your name, much beloved in God ; which ye have very
justly attained by a habit of righteousness, according
to the faith and love which is in Jesus Christ our Sa-
viour. How that being followers of God, and stirring
up yourselves by the blood of Christ, ye have perfect-
ly accomplished the work that was con-natural unto
you. For hearing that I came bound from Syria, for
the common name and hope, trusting through your
prayers to fight with beasts at Rome ; that so by suf-
fering I may become indeed the disciple of him who
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JHE APOCRYPHAL EPISTLES, 425
gave himself to God, ah offering and sacrifice for us
(ye hastened to see me). I received, therefore, in the
name of God, your whole multitude in Onesimus. Who
by inexpressible love is ours, but according to the flesh
as your bishop : whom I beseech you, by Jesus Christ,
to love ; and that you would all strive to be like unto
him. And blessed be God, who has granted unto you,
who are so worthy of him, to enjoy such an excellent
bishop. For what concerns my fellow-servant Burrhus,
and your most blessed deacon in things pertaining to
God ; I entreat you flmt lie may tarry longer, both for
yours and your bishop's honor. And Crocus, also,
worthy both of our God and you, whom I have received
as the pattern of your love, has in all things refreshed
me, as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ shall also
refresh him, together with Onesimus, iind Burrhus, and
Euplus, and Fonto, in whom I have, as to your charity,
seen all of you. And may I always have joy of you,
if I shall be worthy of it. It is therefore fitting that
you should by all means glorify Jesus Christ who hath
glorified you ; that by a uniform obedience ye may be
perfectly joined together in the same mind, and in the
same judgment ; and may all speak the same things
concerning every thing : And that being subject to
your bishop, and the presbytery, ye may be wholly
and thoroughly sanctified. These things I prescribe
to you, not as if I were somebody extraordinary : for
though I am bound for his name, I am not yet perfect
in Christ Jesus. But now I begin ±o learn, and I
speak to you as fellow-disciples together with me. For
I ought to have been stirred up by you, in faith, in
admonition, in patience, in long suffering : but for as
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much as charity suffers me not to be silent towards
you, I have first taken upon me to exhort you, that ye
would all run together according to the will of God.
For even Jesus Christ, our inseparable life, is sent by
the will of the Father ; as the bishops, appointed unto
the utmost bounds of the earth, are by the will of
Jesus Christ. Wherefore it will become you to run
together according to the will of your bishop, as also
ye do. For your famous presbytery, worthy of God,
is fitted as exactly to the bishop, as the strings are to
the harp. Therefore in your concord, and agreeing
charity, Jesus Christ is sung ; and every single person
among you makes up the chorus : That so being all
consonant in love, and taking up the song of God, ye
may in perfect unity, with one voice, sing to the
Father by Jesus Christ ; to the end that he may both
hear you, and perceive by your works, that ye are in-
deed the members of his Son. Wherefore it is profit-
able for you to live in an unblamable unity, that so ye
may always have a fellowship with God.
For if I in this little time have had such a familiarity
with your bishop, I mean not a carnal, but spiritual
acquaintance with him, how much more must I think
you happy who are so joined to him, as the church is
to Jesus Christ, and Jesus Christ to the Father; that so
all things may agree in the same unity ? Let no man
deceive himself; if a man be not within the altar, he
is deprived of the bread of God. For if the prayer
of one or two be of such force, as we are told, how
much more powerful shall that of the bishop and the
whole church be ? He therefore that does not come
together into the same place with it, is proud, and haa
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already condemned himself. For it is written, God
resisteth the proud. Let us take heed therefore, that
we do not set ourselves against the bishop, that we
may be subject to God. The more any one sees his
bishop silent, the more let him revere him. For whom-
soever the master of the house sends to be over his
own household, we ought in like manner to receive
him, as we would do him that sent him. It is there-
fore evident that we ought to look upon the bishop
even as we would do upon the Lord himself And in-
deed Onesimus himself does greatly commend your
good order in God : that you all live according to the
truth, and that no heresy dwells among you. For
neither do ye hearken to any one more than to Jesus
Christ speaking to you in truth. For some there are
who carry about the name of Christ in deceitfulness,
but do things unworthy of God ; whom ye must flee,
as ye would so many wild beasts. For they are
ravening dogs, who bite secretly : against whom ye
must guard yourselves, as men hardly to be cured.
There is one physician, both fleshly and spiritual ; made
and not made ; God incarnate ; true life in death ; both
of Mary and of God ; first passible ; then impassible ;
even Jesus Christ our Lord. Wherefore, let no man
deceive you , as indeed neither are ye deceived, being
wholly the servants of God. For inasmuch as there
is no contention, nor strife among you, to trouble you,
ye must needs live according to God's will. My soul
be for yours ; and I myself the expiatory ofiering for
your church of Ephesus, so famous throughout the
world. They that are of the flesh cannot do the works
of the spirit ; neither they that are of the spirit the
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works of the flesh. As he that has faith cannot be ob
infidel ; nor he that is an infidel have faith. But even
those things which ye do according to the flesh are
spiritual; forasmuch as ye do all things in Jesus
Christ Nevertheless I have heard of some who have
passed by you, having perverse doctrine ; whom ye
did not sufier to sow among you ; but stopped your
ears, that ye might not receive those things that were
sown by them ; as being the stones of the temple of
the Father, prepared for his building ; and drawn up
on high by the cross of Christ, as by an engine. Using
the Holy Ghost as the rope ; your faith being your
support; and your charity the way that leads unto
God. Ye are, therefore, with all your companions in
the same journey, full of God ; his spiritual temples,
full of Christ, full of holiness; adorned in all things
with the commands of Christ. In whom also I rejoice
that I have been thought worthy by this present epistle
to converse, and joy together with you ; that with re-
spect to the other life, ye love nothing but God only.
Pray also without ceasing for other men ; for there
is hope of repentance In them, that they may attain
unto God ; let them therefore at least be instructed by
your works, if they will be no other way. Be ye mild
at their anger; humble at their boasting: to tlieir
blasphemies, return your prayers: to their error, your
firmness in the faith : when they are cruel, be ye gen-
tle ; not endeavoring to imitate their ways. Let us
be their brethren in all kindness and moderation, l»ut
let us be^ followers of the Lord : for who was over
:more unjustly used ? more destitute ? more despisod ?
That so no herb of the Devil may be found in you^
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but ye may remain in all holiness and sobriety, both
of body and spirit, in Christ Jesus. The last times are
come upon us: let us therefore be very reverent, and
fear the long-suflFering of God, that it be not to us
unto condwnnation. For let us either fear the wrath
that is to come, or let us love the grace that we at
present enjoy ; that by the one, or other, of these
we may be found in Christ Jesus linto true life. Be-
sides him, let nothings be worthy of you; for whom
also I bear about these bonds, those spiritual jewels,
in which I would to God that I might arise through
your prayers. Of which I entreat you to make me
always partaker, that I may be found in the lot of the
Christians of Ephesus, who have always agreed with
the apostles, through the power of Jesus Christ. I
know both who I am, and to whom I write : I, a per-
son condemned ; ye, such as have obtained mercy ; I,
exposed to danger; ye, confirmed against danger. Ye
are the passage of those that are kiUed for God ; the
companions of Paul in the mysteries of the Gospel;
the holy, the martyr, the deservedly most happy Paul;
at whose feet may I be found, when I shall have at-
tained unto God ; who throughout all his epistles makes
mention of you in Christ Jesus. Let it be your care,
therefore, to come more fully together, to the praise
and glory of God. For when ye meet fully together
in the same place, the powers of the devil are de-
stroyed, and his mischief is dissolved by the unity of
your faith. And indeed, nothing is better than peace,,
by which all war, both spiritual and earthly, are abol-
ished. Of all which nothing is hid from you, if ye.
have perfect faith and charity in Christ Jesus, which
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are the beginning and end of life. For the beginning
is faith ; the end charity. And these two, joined to-
gether, are of God : but all other things -which con-
cern a holy life, are the consequences of these. No
man professing a true faith, sinneth ; neither does he
who has charity, hate any. The tree is made manifest
by its fruit : so they who profess themselves to be
Christians are known by what they do. For Christian-
ity is not the work of an outward profession; but
shows itself in the power of feith, if a man be found
faithful unto the end. It is better for a man to hold
his peace, and be, than to say, he is a Christian, and
not to be. It is good to teach, if what he says, he
does likewise. There is therefore one Master who
spake, and it was done ; and even those things which
he did without speaking, are worthy of the Father.
He that possesses the word of Jesus, is truly able to
hear his very silence, that he may be perfect; and
both do according to what he speaks, and be known
of those things of which he is silent. There is nothing
hid from God, but even our secrets are nigh unto him.
Let us therefore do all things, as becomes those who
have God dwelling in them ; that we may be his tem-
ples, and he may be our God ; as also he is, and will
manifest himself before our faces, by those things for
which we justly love him.
Be not deceived, my brethren : those that corrupt
families by adultery, shall not inherit the kingdom of
God. If therefore they who do this according to the
flesh, have suffered death, how much more shall he
die, who by his wicked doctrine corrupts the faith of
God, for which Christ was crucified ? He that is thus
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THE APOCRYPHAL EPISTLES. 431
defiled, shall depart into unquenchable fire, and so
also shall he that hearkens to him. For this cause did
the Lord suffer the ointment to be poured on his head ;
that he might breathe the breath of immortality into
his church. Be not ye therefore anointed with the
evil savor of the doctrine of the prince of this world :
let him not take you captive from the life that is set
before you. And why are we not all wise ; seeing we
have received the knowledge of God, which is Jesus
Christ ? Why do we suffer ourselves foolishly to per-
ish ; not considering the gift which the Lord has truly
sent to us? Let my life be sacrificed for the doctrine
of the cross ; which is indeed a scandal to the unbe-
lievers, but to us is salvation and life eternal. Where
is the wise man? Where is the disputer? Where is
the boasting of those who are called wise ? For our
God, Jesus Christ, was according to the dispensation of
God, conceived in the womb of Mary, of the seed of
David, by the Holy Ghost : he was bom, and baptized,
that through his passion he might purify water, to the
washing away of sin. Now the virginity of Mary, and
he who was bom of her, was kept secret from the
prince of this world ; as was also the death of our
Lord; three of the mysteries the most spoken of
throughout the world, yet done in secret by God.
How then was our Saviour manifested to the world?
A star shone in heaven beyond all the other stars, and
its light was inexpressible, and its novelty strack ter-
ror into men's minds. All the rest of the stars, to-
gether with the sun and moon, were the choras to this
star; but that sent out its light exceedingly above
them alL And men began to be troubled to think
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whence this new star came, so unlike to all the others.
Hence all the power of magic became dissolved ; and
every bond of wickedness was destroyed; men's igno-
rance was taken away ; and the old kingdom abolish-
ed ; God himself appearing in the form of a man, for
the renewal of eternal life. From thence began what
God had prepared : from thenceforth things were dis-
turbed ; forasmuch as he designed to abolish death.
But if Jesus Christ shall give me grace through yonr
prayers, and it be his will, I purpose in a second epis-
tle, which I will suddenly write unto you, to manifest
to you more fully the dispensation of which I have:
now begun tx> speak, unto the new man, which is Jesus •
Christ; both in his feiith,. and charity ; in his suffering*
and in his resurrection. Especially if the Lord shall
make known unto me, that ye all by name come to-
gether in common in one faith, andin one Jesus Christ ;
who was of the race of David, according to the flesh ;
the Son of man and Son of God; obeyingyour bishop
and the presbytery with an entire affection; breaking
one and the same bread, which is. the medicine of im-^
mortality; our antidote that we should not die, but
live forever in Christ Jesus. My soul be for yours,:
and theirs whom ye have sent, to the glory of God;
even unto Smyrna, from whence also I write to
you ; giving thanks unto the Lord, and loving Poly carp
even as I do you. Remember me, as Jesus Christ does
remember you. Pray for the church which is in Syria^
from whence I am carried bound to Rome ; being the*
least of all the faithful which are there, aslliave b^en:
thought worthy to be found to the glory of God.
Fare ye well in God the Father, and in Jesus Christ,
our common hope. Amen.
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THE APOCRYPHAL EPISTLES. 433
THE EPISTLE OF POLYCARP TO THE PHILIPPIANS.
Polycarp, and the presbyters that are with him, to
the church of God which is at Philippi ; mercy unto
you, and peace, from God Almighty, and the Lord
Jesus Christ, our Saviour, be multiplied. I rejoiced
greatly with you in our Lord Jesus Christ, that ye re-
ceived the images of a true love, and accompanied as
it behoves you, those who were in bonds becoming
saints ; which are the crowns of such as are truly
chosen by God and our Lord : as also that the root of
the faith which was preached from ancient times, re-
mains firm in you to this day ; and brings forth fruit
to our Lord Jesus Christ, who sufiered himself to be
brought even to the death for our sins. Whom God
hath raised up, having loosed the pains of death.
Whom having not seen, ye love ; in whom, though
now ye see him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy
unspeakable and full of glory. Into which many de-
sire to enter ; knowing that by grace ye are saved ;
not by works, but by the will of God through Jesus
Christ. Wherefore, girding up the loins of your minds ;
serve the Lord with fear, and in truth laying aside all
empty and vain speech, and the error of many ; be-
lieving in him that raised up our Lord Jesus Christ
from the dead, and hath given him glory, and a throne
at his right hand. To whom all things are made sub-
ject, both that are in heaven, and that are in earth ;
whom every living creature shall worship ; who shall
come to be the judge of the quick and the dead ;
whose blood God shall require of them that believe
not in him. But he that raised up Christ from the
28
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dead, shall also raise up us in like manner, if we do
his will, and walk according to his commandments;
and love those things which he loved : abstaining* from
all unrighteousness ; inordinate affection, and love of
money; from evil speaking; Ms/q witness; not ren-
dering evil for evil, or railing for railing, or striking
for striking, or cursing for cursing. But remember
what the Lord has taught us, saying. Judge not, that
ye shall not be judged ; forgive, and ye shall be for-
given ; be ye merciful, and ye shall obtain mercy ; for
with the same measure that ye mete withal, it shall be
measured to you again. And again, that blessed are the
poor, and they that are persecuted for righteousness^
sake ; for theirs is the kingdom of God.
These things, my brethren, I took not the liberty of
myself to write unto you concerning righteousness,
but you yourselves before encouraged me to do it.
For neither can I, nor any other such as I am, come
up to the wisdom of the blessed and renowned Paul ;
who, being himself in person with those who then
lived, did with all exactness and soundness teach the
word of truth ; and being gone from you, wrote an
epistle to you. Into which if you look, you will be
able to edify yourselves in the faith that has been de-
livered unto you ; which is the mother of us all ; being
followed with hope, and led on by a general love, both
towards God and towards Christ, and towards our
neighbour. For if any man has these things, he
has fulfilled the law of righteousness : for he that has
charity is far from all sin. But the love of money is
the root of all evil. Knowing therefore that as we
brought nothing into this world, so neither may we
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THE APOCRYPHAL EPISTLES. 43S
carry anything out; let us arm ourselves with the
armor of righteousness. 'And teach ourselves first to
walk according to the commandments of the Lord ;
and then our wives to walk likewise according to the
faith that is given to them ; in charity, and in purity ;
loving their own husbands with all sincerity, and all
others alike with all temperance ; and to bring up their
children in the instruction and fear of the Lord. The
widows likewise teach that they be sober as to what
concerns the faith of the Lord ; praying always for all
men ; being far from all detraction, evil speaking, false
witness ; from covetousness, and from all evil. Know-
ing that they are the altars of God, who sees all blem-
ishes, and from whom nothing is hid ; who searches
out the very reasonings, and thoughts, and secrets of
our hearta Knowing, therefore, that God is not
mocked, we ought to walk worthy both of his com-
mand and of his glory. Also the deacons must be
blameless before him, as the ministers of God in Christ,
and not of men. Not false accusers; not double-
tongued ; not lovers of money ; but moderate in all
things ; compassionate, careful ; walking according to
the truth of the Lord, who was the servant of all.
Whom if we please in this present world, we shall also
be made partakers of that which is to come, according
as he hath promised us, that he will raise us up from
the dead ; and that if we shall walk worthy of him,
we shall also reign together with him, if we believe.
In like manner the younger men must be unblamable
in all things ; above all, taking care of their purity,
and to restrain themselves from all evil For it is good
to be cut off from the lusts that are in the world ; be-
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cause every such lust warretli against the spirit : and
neither fornicators, nor effeminate, nor abusers of them-
selves with mankind, shall inherit the kingdom of God ;
nor they who do such things as are foolish and unrea-
sonable. Wherefore ye must needs abstain from all
these things ; being subject to the priests and deacons,
as unto God and Christ. The virgins admonish to
walk in a spotless and pure conscience. And let the
elders be compassionate and merciful towards all, turn-
ing them from their errors ; seeking out those that are
weak ; not forgetting the widows, the fatherless, and
the poor ; but always providing what is good both in
the sight of God and man. Abstaining from all wrath,
respect of persons, and unrighteous judgment ; and
especially being free from all covetousness. Not easy
to believe anything against any ; not severe in judg-
ment; knowing that we are all debtors in point
of sin. If therefore we pray to the Lord that he
would forgive us, we ought rlso to forgive others , for
we are all in the sight of our Lord and God ; and must
all stand before the judgment seat of Christ; and
shall every one give an account of himself. Let us
therefore serve him in fear, and with all reverence as
both himself hath commanded, and as the apostles
who have preached the Gospel unto us, and the proph-
ets who have foretold the coming of our Lord, have
taught us : being zealous of what is good ; abstaining
from all offence, and from false brethren ; and from
those who bear the name of Christ in hypocrisy ; who
deceive vain men.
For whosoever does not confess that Jesus Christ is
f!ome in the flesh, he is Antichrist : and whoever does
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THB APOCRYPHAL EPISTLES. 437
not confess his suffering upon the cross, is from the
DeviL And whosoever perverts the oracles of the
Lord to his own lusts ; and says that there shall nei-
ther be any resurrection, nor judgment, he is the first-
bom of Satan. Wherefore, leaving the vanity of
many, and their false doctrines ; let us return to the
word that was delivered to us from the beginning ;
Watching unto prayer; and persevering in fasting:
With supplication beseeching the all-seeing God not
to lead us into temptation ; as the Lord hath said ;
The spirit truly is willing, but the flesh is weak. Let
us therefore, without ceasing, hold steadfastly to him
who is our hope, and the earnest of our righteousness,
even Jesus Christ ; Who his own self bear our sins in
his own body on the tree ; who did not sin, neither
was guile found in his mouth. But suffered all for us
that we might live through him. Let us therefore im-
itate his patience ; and if we suffer for his name, let us
glorify him ; for this example he has given us by him-
self, and so have we believed. Wherefore I exhort
all of you that ye obey the word of righteousness, and
exercise all patience ; which ye have seen set forth be-
fore your eyes, not only in the blessed Ignatius, and
Zozimus, and Rufus ; but in others among yourselves ;
and in Paul himself, and the rest of the Apostles : Be-
ing confident of this, that all these have not run in
vain ; but in faith and righteousness, and are gone to
the place that was due to them from the Lord ; with
whom also they suffered. For they loved not this
present world; but him who died, and was raised
again by God for ua Stand therefore in these things
and follow the example of the Lord ; being firm and
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immutable in the faith, lovers of the brotherhood, lovers
of one another ; companions together in the truth, be-
ing kind and gentle toward each other, despising none.
When it is in your power to do good, defer it not ; for
charity delivereth from death. Be all of you subject
one to another; having your conversation honest
among the Gentiles ; that by your good works, both
ye yourselves may receive praise, and the Lord may
not be blasphemed through you. But wo be to Inm
by whom the name of the Lord is blasphemed There-
fore teach all men sobriety ; in which do ye also ex-
ercise yourselves.
I am greatly afflicted for Valens, who was once a
presbyter among you ; that he should so little under-
stand the place that was given to him in the church.
Wherefore I admonish you that ye abstain from cove-
tousness ; and that ye be chaste, and true of speech.
Keep yourselves from all evil. For he that in these
things cannot govern himself, how shall he be able to
prescribe them to another ? If a man does not keep
himself from covetousness, he shall be polluted with
idolatry, and be judged as if he were a Gentile. But
who of you are ignorant of the judgment of God ?
Do we not know that the saints shall judge the world,
as Paul teaches ? But I have neither perceived nor
heard any thing of this kind in you, among whom the
blessed Paul laboured ; and who are named in the be-
ginning of his Epistle. For he glories of you in all
the churches whp then only knew God ; for we did
not then know him. Wherefore, my brethren, I am
exceedingly sorry both for him, and for his wife ; to
whom God grant a true repentance. And be ye also
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THE APOCRYPHAL BPISTLBS. 439
moderate upon this occasion ; and look not upon such
as enemies, but call them back as suflfering and erring
members, that ye may save your whole body : for by
so doing, ye shall edify your own selves. For I trust
that ye are well exercised in the Holy Scriptures, and
that nothing is hid from you : but at present it is not
granted unto me to practise that which is written, Be
angry and sin not ; and again, Let not the sun go
down upon your wrath. Blessed is he that belie veth
and remembereth these things ; which also I trust you
do. Now the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, and he himself who is our everlasting high-
priest, the Son of God, even Jesus Christ, build you
up in faith and in truth, and in all meekness and leni-
ty ; in patience and long-suflfering, in forbearance and
chastity ; and grant unto you a lot and portion among
his saints ; and us with you, and to all that are under
the heavens, who shall believe in our Lord Jesus Christ,
and in his Father who raised him from the dead. Pray
for all the saints : pray also for kings, and all that are
in authoi'ity ; and for those who persecute you, and
hate you, and for the enemies of the cross ; that your
fruit may be manifest in all ; and that ye may be per-
fect in Christ. Ye wrote to me, both ye, and also Ig-
natius, that if any one went from hence into Syria, he
should bring your letters with him ; which also I will
take care of, as soon as I shall have a convenient op-
portunity ; either by myself, or him whom I shall send
upon your account. The epistle of Ignatius which
he wrote unto us, together with what others of his
have come to our hands, we have sent to you, accord-
ing to your order ; which are subjoined to this epistle :
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By which ye may be greatly profited ; for they treat
of faith and patience, and of all things that pertain tc
edification in the Lord Jesus. What you know cer-
tainly of Ignatius, and those that are with him, signify
unto us. These things have I written unto you by
Crescens, whom by this present epistle I have recom-
mended to you, and do now again commend. For he
has had his conversation without blame among us ; and
I suppose also with you. Ye will also have regard
imto his sister, when she shall come unto you. Be ye
safe in the Lord Jesus Christ ; and in favor with all
yours. Amen.
THE SHEPHERD OF HERMAS.
FROM THE FmST BOOK OF HERMAS CALLED VISIONa
He who had bred me up sold a certain young maid
at Rome ; whom when I saw many years after, I re-
membered her, and began to love her as a sister. It
happened some time afterwards, that I saw her wash-
ing at the river Tyber, and I reached out my hand to
her, and led her away from the river. And when I
saw her, I thought with myself, saying, How happy
should I be if I had such a wife, both for beauty and
manners! This I thought with myself; nor did I think
any thing more. But not long after, as I was walking,
and musing on these thoughts, I began to honor this
creature of God, thinking with myself how noble and
beautiful she was. And when I had walked a little, 1
fell asleep. And the Spirit caught me away, and car*
ried me through a certain place toward the right hand,
through which no man could pass. It was a place
among rocks, very steep, ajid unpassable for water.
When I was past this place, I came into a plain ; and
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THE APOCRYPHAL EPISTLES. 441
there, falling down upon my knees, I began to pray
unto the Lord, and to confess my sins. And as I was
praying, the heaven was opened, and I saw the woman
whom I had coveted, saluting me from heaven, and
saying. Hennas, hail ! and I, looking upon her, an-
swered. Lady, what dost thou do here ? She answered
me, I am taken up hither to accuse thee of sin before
the Lord. Lady, said I, Wilt thou convince me ? No,
said she ; but hear the words which I am about to
speak unto thee. God, who dwelleth in heaven, and
hath made all things out of nothing, and hath multi-
plied them for his holy church's sake, is angry with
thee, because thou hast sinned against me. And I an-
swering said unto her. Lady, if I have sinned against
thee, tell me where, or in what place ; or when did I
ever speak an unseemly or dishonest word unto thee ?
Have I not always esteemed thee as a lady ? Have I
not always reverenced thee as a sister? Why then dost
thou imagine these wicked things against me ? Then
she, smiling upon me, said, The desire of naughtiness
has risen up in thy heart. Does it not seem to thee to
be an ill thing for a righteous man to have an evil de-
sire rise up in his heart ? It is indeed a sin, and that
a very great one, to such a one ; for a righteous man
thinketh that which is righteous. And whilst he does
so, and walketh uprightly, he shall have the Lord in
heaven favorable unto him in all his business. But
as for those who think wickedly in their hearts, they
take to themselves death and captivity ; and especially
those who love this present world, and glory in their
riches, and regard not the good things, that are to
come ; their souls wander up and down, and know not
where to fix. Now this is the case of such as are
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double-minded, who trust not in the Lord, and despise
and neglect their own life. But do thou pray unto
the Lord, and he will heal thy sins, and the sins of thy
whole house, and of all his saints. As soon as she had
spoken these words, the heavens were shut, and I re-
mained utterly swallowed up with sadness and fear ;
and said within myself, If this be laid against me for
sin, how can I be saved ? Or how shall I ever be able
to entreat the Lord for my many and great sins?
With what words shall I beseech him to be merciful
unto me ? As I was thinking over these things, and
meditating in myself upon them, behold a chair was
set over against me of the whitest wool, as bright as
snow. And there came an old woman in a bright gar-
ment, having a book in her hand, and sat alone, and
saluted me, saying, Hermas, hail ! And I, being full
of sorrow, and weeping, answered, Hail, Lady ! And
she said unto me. Why art thou sad, Hermas, who wast
wont to be patient, and modest, and always cheerful ?
I answered, and said to her. Lady, a reproach has been
laid to my charge by an excellent woman, who tells
me that I have sinned against her. She replied, Far
be any such thing from the servant of God. But it
may be the desire of her has risen up in thy heart ?
For indeed such a thought maketh the servants of God
guilty of sin ; nor ought such a detestable thought to
be in the servants of God ; nor should he who is ap-
proved by the Spirit desire that which is evil ; but es-
pecially Hermas, who contains himself from all wicked
lusts, and is full of all simplicity, and of great inno-
cence. Nevertheless the Lord is not so much angry
with thee for thine own sajce, as upon the account of
thy house, which has committed wickedness against
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the Lord, and against their parenta And for that out
of thy fondness towards thy sons, thou hast not ad-
monished thy house, but hast permitted them to live
wickedly : for this cause the Lord is angry with thee :
but he will heal all the evils that are done in thy house.
For through their sins and iniquities, thou art wholly
consumed in secular affairs. But now the mercy of
God hath taken compassion upon thee, and upon thy
house, and hath greatly comforted thee. Only as for
thee, do not wander, but be of an even mind, and
comfort thy house. As the workman, bringing forth
his work, offers it to whomsoever he pleases ; so shalt
thou, by teaching every day what is just, cut off a
great sin. Wherefore cease not to admonish thy sons,
for the Lord knows that they will repent with all their
heart, and they shall be written in the book of life.
And when she had said this, she added unto me. Wilt
thou hear me read ? — I answered her. Lady, I will.
Hear, then, said she ; and opening the book, she read,
gloriously, greatly, and wonderfully, such things as I
could not keep in my memory. For they were terri-
ble words, such as no man could bear. Howbeit I
committed her last words to my remembrance; for
they were but few, and of great use to us. Behold
the mighty Lord, who by his invisible power, and with
his excellent wisdom, made the world, and by his glo-
rious counsel beautified his creature, and with the
word of his strength fixed the heaven, and founded
the earth upon the waters ; and by his powerful virtue
established his Holy Church, which he hath blessed :
Behold, he will remove the heavens, and the moun-
tains, the hills, and the seas ; and all things shall be
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made plain for his elect ; that he may render unto them
the promise which he hath promised with much honor
and joy ; if so be that they shall keep the command-
ments of God, which they have received with great
faith. And when she had made an end of reading,
she rose out of the chair ; and behold four young men
came, and carried the chair to the east. And she
called me unto her, and touched my breast, and said
unto me. Did my reading please thee ? — I answered,
Lady, these last things please me ; but what went be-
fore was severe and hard. She said unto me. These
last things are for the righteous, but the foregoing for
the revolters and heathen. And as she was talking
with me, two men appeared, and took her upon their
shoulders, and went to the east where the chair was.
And she went cheerfully away ; and as she was going,
said unto me, Hermas, be of good cheer.
As I was on the way to Cuma, about the same time
that I went the year before, I began to call to mind
the vision I formerly had. And again the Spirit car-
ried me away, and brought me into the same place, in
which I had been the year before. And when I was
come into the place, I fell down upon my knees, and
began to pray unto the Lord, and to glorify his name,
that he had esteemed me worthy, and had manifested
unto me my former sins. And when I arose from
prayer, behold I saw over against me the old woman
whom I had seen the last year, walking, and reading
in a certain book. And she said unto me. Canst thou
tell these things to the elect of God ? — I answered,
and said unto her. Lady, I cannot retain so many
things in my memory, but give me the book, and I
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will write them down. Take it, says she, and see that
thou restore it again to me. As soon as I had received
it, I went aside into a certain place of the field, and
transcribed every letter, for I found no syllables. And
as soon as I had finished what was written in the book,
the book was suddenly caught out of my hands, but
by whom I saw not. After fifteen days, when I had
fasted, and entreated the Lord with all earnestness,
the knowledge of the writing was revealed unto me.
Now the writing was this : Thy seed, 0 Hennas ! have
sinned against the Lord, and have betrayed their pa-
rents, through their great wickedness. And they have
been called the betrayers of their parents, and have
gone on in their treachery. And now have they ad-
ded lewdness to their other sins, and the pollutions of
naughtiness : thus have they filled up the measure of
their iniquities. But do thou upbraid thy sons with
all these words ; and thy wife, which shall be thy sis-
ter ; and let her refrain her tongue with which she
calumniates. For when she shall hear these things,
she will refrain herself, and shall obtain mercy. And
they also shall be instructed when thou shalt have
reproached them with these words, which the Lord
hath commanded to be revealed unto thee. Then shall
their sins be forgiven which they have heretofore com-
mitted, and the sins of* all the saints, who have sinned
even unto this day ; if they shall repent with all their
hearts, and remove all doubts out of their hearts.
For the Lord hath sworn by his glory concerning his
elect, having determined this very time, that if any
one shall even now sin, he shall not be saved. For
the repentance of the righteous has its end : the days
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of repentance are fulfilled to all the saints ; but to the
heathen, there is repentance even unto the last day.
Thou shalt therefore say to those who are over the
church ; that they order their ways in righteousness ;
that they may fully receive the promise with much
glory. Stand fast, therefore, ye that work righteous-
ness ; and continue to do it, that your departure may
be with the holy angels. Happy are ye, as many as
shall endure the great trial that is at hand, and whoso-
ever shall not deny his life. For the Lord hath sworn
by his Son, that whoso denyeth his son and him, being
afraid of his life, he will also deny him in the world
that is to come. But those who shall never deny him,
he will of his exceeding great mercy be favourable
unto them. But thou, 0 Hermas ! remember not the
evils which thy sons have done, neither neglect thy
sister, but take care that they amend of their former
sins. For they will be instructed by this doctrine, if
thou shalt not be mindful of what they have done
wickedly. For the remembrance of evils worketh
death ; but the forgetting of them, life eternal. But
thou, 0 Hermas ! hast undergone a great many worldly
troubles for the offences of thy house, because thou
hast neglected them, as things that did not belong unto
thee : and thou art wholly taken up with thy great
business. Nevertheless for this cause shalt thou be
saved, that thou hast not departed from the living
God ; and thy simplicity and singular continency shall
preserve thee, if thou shalt continue in them. Yea,
they shall save all sueh as do such things ; and walk
in innocence and simplicity. They who are of this
kind, shall prevail against all impiety, and continue
unto life eternal.
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FROM THE SECOND BOOK OF HERMAS CALLED COMMANDS.
When I had prayed at home, and was sat down
upon the bed, a certain man came into me with a rev-
erend look, in the habit of a shepherd, clothed with
a white cloak, having his bag upon his back, and his
staff in his hand, and saluted me. I returned his salu-
tation ; and immediately he sat down by me, and said
unto me, I am sent by that venerable messenger, that
I should dwell with thee all the remaining days of thy
life. But I thought that he was come to try me, and
said unto him Who art thou ? For I know to whom
I am committed. He said unto me. Do you not know
me ? I answered, No. Tam, said he, that shepherd,
to whose care you are delivered. Whilst he was yet
speaking, his shape was changed ; and when I knew
that it was he to whom I was committed, I was ashamed
and a sudden fear came upon me, and I was utterly
overcome with sadness, because I had spoken so fool-
ishly unto him. But he said unto me. Be not ashamed,
but receive strength in thy mind, through the com-
mands which I am about to deliver unto thee. For,
said he, I am sent to show unto thee all those things
again, which thou hast seen before; but especially
such of them as may be of most use unto thee. And
first of all write my Commands and Similitudes ; the
rest thou shalt so write as I shall show unto thee.
But I therefore bid the first of all write my Commands
and Similitudes, that by often reading of them, thou
mayest the more easily keep them in memory. Where-
upon I wrote his Commands and Similitudes, as he
bade me. Which things if, when you have heard ye
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shall observe to do them, and shall walk according to
them, and exercise yourselves in them, with a pure
mind, ye shall receive from the Lord those things
which he has promised unto you. But if, having heard
them, ye shall not repent, but shall still go on to
add to your sins, ye shall be punished by him. All
these things that shepherd, the angel of repentance,
commanded me to write.
First of all, believe that there is but one God, who
created and framed all things of nothing into being.
He comprehends all things, and is only immense, not
to be comprehended by any. Who can neither be
defined by atiy words, nor conceived by the mind.
Therefore believe in him, and fear him ; and fearing
him, abstain from all evil. Keep these things, and
cast all lust and iniquity far from thee; and put on
righteousness ; and thou shalt live to God, if thou shalt
keep his commandments.
He said unto me. Be innocent, and without disguise;
so shalt thou be like an infant who knows no malice,
which destroys the life of man. Especially see that
thou speak evil of none ; nor willingly hear any one
speak evil of any. For if thou observest not this,
thou also who hearest, shalt be partaker of the sin of
him that speaketh evil by believing the slander, and
thou also shalt have sin; because thou believedst
him that spake evil of thy brother. Detraction is a
pernicious thing ; an inconstant, evil spirit ; that never
continues in peace, but is always in discord. Where-
fore refrain thyself from it ; and keep peace evermore
with thy brother. Put on a holy constancy, in which
there are no sins, but all is full of joy ; and do good
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of thy labours. Give without distinction to all that
are in want ; not doubting to whom thou givest. But
give to all ; for God will have us give to all, of all
his own gifts. They therefore that receive shall give
an account to God, both wherefore they receive, and
for what end. And they that receive without a real
need, shall give an account for it ; but he that gives
shall be innocent : for he has fulfilled his duty as he
received it from God ; not making any choice to whom
he should give, and to whom not. And this service
he did with simplicity, and to the glory of God. Keep
therefore this command according as I have delivered
it unto thee ; that thy repentance may be found to be
sincere, and that good may come to thy house ; and
thou mayest have a pure heart.
Moreover he said unto me. Love truth and let all
the speech be true which proceeds out of thy mouth ;
that the spirit which the Lord hath given to dwell in
thy flesh may be found true towards all men ; and
the Lord be glorified, who hath given such a spirit
unto thee ; because God is true in all his words, and
in him there is no^lie. They therefore that lie, deny
the Lord ; and become robbers of the Lord ; not ren-
dering to God what they received from him. For
they received the Spirit free from lying : if therefore
they make that a liar, they defile what was committed
to them by the Lord, and become deceivers. When
I heard this I wept bitterly. And when he saw me
weeping, he said unto me. Why weepest thou ? And
I said. Because, sir, I doubt whether I can be saved.
He asked me. Wherefore ? I replied. Because, sir, I
never spake a true word in my life ; but always lived
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in dissimulation, and affirmed a lie for truth to all men ;
and no man contradicted me, but all gave credit to
my words. How then can I live, seeing I have done
in this manner ? And he said unto me. Thou thinkest
well and truly. For thou oughtest, as the servant of
Ood, to have walked in the truth, and not have joined
an evil conscience with the Spirit of truth ; nor have
grieved the holy and true Spirit of God. And I replied
unto him. Sir, I never before hearkened so diligently
to these things. He answered. Now thou hearest
them : take care from henceforth, that even those things
which thou hast formerly spoken falsely for the sake
of thy business, may, by thy present truth, receive
credit For even those things may be credited, if for
the time to come thou shalt speak the truth ; and by
so doing thou mayest attain unto life. And whosoever
shall hearken unto this command, and do it, and shall
depart from all lying, he shall live unto God.
Furthermore, said he, I command thee, that thou
keep thyself chaste; and that thou suffer not any
thought of any other marriage, or of fornication, to
enter into thy heart : for such a thought produces a
great sin. But be thou at all times mindful of the
Lord, and thou shalt never sin. For if such an evil
thought should arise in thy heart, thou shouldest be
guilty of a great sin ; and they who do such things,
follow the way of death. Look therefore to thyseli^
and keep thyself from such a thought : for where
chastity remains in the heart of a righteous man, there
an evil thought ought never to arise. And I said unto
him. Sir, suffer me to speak a little to you. He bade
me say on. And I answered. Sir, if a man that is
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faithful in the Lord, shall have a wife, and shall catch
her in adultery, doth a man sin that continueth to live
still with her ? And he said unto me, As long as he
is ignorant of her sin, he commits no fault in living
with her: but if a man shall know his wife to have
offended, and she shall not repent of her sin, but go
on still in her fornication, and a man shall continue
nevertheless to live with her, he shall become guilty
of her sin, and partake with her in her adultery. And
I said unto him. What therefore is to be done, if the
woman continues on in her sin ? he answered, Let her
husband put her away, and let him continue by him-
self But if he shall put away his wife and marry an-
other, he also doth commit adultery. And I said,
What if the woman that is so put away, shall repent,
and be willing to return to her husband ? shall she not
be received by him ? He said unto me, Yes ; and if
her husband shall not receive her, he will sin; and
commit a great offence against himself: but hfe ought
to receive the offender if she repents ; only not often.
For to the servants of God there is but one repent-
ance. And for this cause a man that putteth away his
wife ought not to take another, because she may re-
pent. This act is alike both in the man and in the
woman. Now they commit adultery, not only who
pollute their flesh, but who also make an image. If
therefore a woman perseveres in anything of this kind,
and repents not, depart from her, and live not with her :
otherwise thou also shall be partaker of her sin.
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PROM THE THIRD BOOK OF HERMAS CALLED SIMILITUDES.
After a few days I saw the same person that before
talked with me, in the same field, in which I had seen
those shepherds. And he said unto me, what seekest
thou ? Sir, said I, I come to entreat you that yon
would command the shepherd, who is the minister of
punishment, to depart but of my house, because he
greatly afflicts me. And he answered, it is necessary
for thee to endure inconveniences and vexations ; for
so that good angel hath commanded concerning thee,
because he would try thee. Sir, said I, what so great
offence have I committed, that I should be delivered
to this messenger ? Hearken, said he ; thou art indeed
guilty of many sins, yet not so many that thou shouldest
be delivered to this messenger. But thy house hath
committed many sins and offences, and therefore that
good messenger, being grieved at their doings, com-
manded that for some time thou shouldest suffer afflic-
tion ; that they may both repent of what they have
done, and may wash themselves from all the lusts of
this present world. When therefore they shall have
repented, and be purified, then that messenger which
is appointed over thy punishments shall depart from
thee. I said unto him. Sir if they have behaved them-
selves so as to anger that good angel, yet what have I
done ? He answered. They can not otherwise be
afflicted, unless thou, who art the head of the family,
suffer. For whatsoever thou shalt suffer, they must
needs feel it : but as long as thou shalt stand well es-
tablished, they can not experience any vexation. I
replied. But, sir, behold they also now repent with all
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their hearta I know, says he, that they repent with
all their hearts ; but dost thou therefore think, that
their oflfences who repent, are immediately blotted
out? No, they are not presently; but he that repents
must afflict his soul, and show himself humblQ in all
his affairs, and undergo many and divers vexations.
And when he shall have suffered all things that were
appointed for him, then perhaps he that made him, and
formed all things besides, will be moved with compas-
sion towards him, and afford him some remedy ; and
especially if he shall perceive his heart, who repents,
to be pure from every evil word. But at present it is
expedient for thee, and for thy house, to be grieved ;
and it is needful that thou shouldest endure much vex-
ation, as the angel of the Lord who committed thee
unto me, has commanded. Rather give thanks unto
the Lord, that knowing what was to come, he thought
thee worthy to whom he should foretell that trouble
was coming upon thee, who art able to bear it I said
unto him. Sir, be but thou also with me, and I shall easily
undergo any trouble. I will, said he, be with thee ; and
I will entreat the messenger who is set over thy. pun-
ishment, that he would moderate his afflictions towards
thee. And moreover thou shalt suffer adversity but
for a little time ; and then thou shalt again be restored
to thy former state ; only continue on in the humility
of thy mind. Obey the Lord with a pure heart, thou,
and thy house, and thy children ; and walk in the
commands which I have delivered unto thee ; and then
thy repentance may be firm and pure. And if thou
shalt keep these things with thy house, thy inconven-
iencies shall depart from thee. And all vexation shall
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in like manner depart from all those, whosoever shall
walk according to these commands.
Again he showed me a willow which covered the
fields and the mountains, under whose shadow came
all such as were called by the name of the Lord. And
by that willow stood an angel of the Lord very excel-
lent and lofty ; and did cut dowji boughs from that
willow with a great hook; and reached out to the
people that were under the shadow of that willow lit-
tle rods, as it were about a foot long. And when all
of them had taken them, he laid aside his hook, and
the tree continued entire, as I had before seen it. At
which I wondered, and mused within myself Then that
shepherd said unto me, Forbear to wonder that that
tree continues whole, notwithstanding so many boughs
have been cut off from it ; but stay a little, for now it
shall be shown thee what that angel means, who gave
those rods to the people. So he again demanded the
rods of them ; and in the same order that every one
had received them, was he called to him, and restored
his rod ; which when he had received, he examined
them. From some he received them dry and rotten,
and as it were touched with the moth ; those he com-
manded to be separated from the rest, and placed by
themselves. Others gave him their rods dry indeed,
but not touched with the moth ; these also he ordered
to be set by themselves. Others gave in their rods
half dry ; these also were set apart. Others gave in
their rods half dry and cleft ; these too were set by
themselves. Others brought in their rods half dry and
half green, and these were in like manner placed by
themselves. Others delivered up their rods two parts
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green, and the third dry ; and they too were set apart.
Others brought their rods two parts dry, and the third
green ; and were also placed by themselves. Others
delivered up their rods less dry (for there was but a
very little, to wit, their tops dry), but they had clefts,
and these were set in like manner by themselves In
the rods of others there was but a little green, and the
rest dry; and these were set aside by themselves.
Others came, and brought their rods green as they had
received them, and the greatest part of the people
brought their rods thus ; and the messenger greatly
rejoiced at these, and they also were put apart by
themselves Others brought their rods not only green
but full of branches ; and these were set aside, being
also received by the angel with great joy. Others
brought their rods green with branches, and those also
some fruit upon them. They who had such rods were
very cheerful ; and the angel himself took great joy
at them ; nor was the shepherd that stood with me
less pleased with them. Then the angel of the Lord
commanded crowns to be brought ; and the crowns
were brought made of palms ; and the angel crowned
those men in whose rods he found the young branches
with fruit ; and commanded them to go into the tower.
He also sent those into the tower, in whose rods he
found branches without fruit, giving a seal unto them.
For they had the same garment, that is, one white as
snow ; with which he bade them go into the tower.
And so he did to those who returned their rods green
as they received them ; giving them a white garment,
and so sent them away to go into the tower. Having
done this, he said to the shepherd that was with me, I
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go my way : but do thou send these within the walls,
every one into the place in which he has deserved to
dwell; examine first their rods, but examine them
diligently, that no one deceive thee. But and if any
one shall escape thee, I will try them upon the altar.
Having said this to the shepherd, he departed. After
he was gone the shepherd said unto me, Let us take
the rods from them all, and plant them ; if perchance
they may grow green again. I said unto him. Sir,
how can those dry rods ever grow green again ? He
answered me. That tree is a willow, and always loves
to live. If therefore these rods shall be planted, and
receive a little moisture, many of them will recover
themselves. Wherefore I will try, and will pour water
upon them, and if any of them can live, I will rejoice
with him ; but if not, at least by this means I shall be
found not to have neglected my part. Then he com-
manded me to call them ; and they all came unto him,
every one in the rank in which he stood, and gave him
their rods ; which having received, he planted every
one of them in their several orders. And after he had
planted them all, he poured much water upon then^
insomuch that they were covered with water, and did
not appear above it. Then when he had watered
them, he said unto me. Let us depart, and after a lit-
tle time we will return and visit them. For he who
created this tree, would have all those live that re-
ceived rods from it And I hope, now that these rods
are thus watered, many of them, receiving in the
moisture, will rQCOver. I said unto him, Sir, tell ma
what this tree denotes? For I am greatly astonished,
that after so many branches have beeti cut oflF, it seems
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still to be whole ; nor does there any thing the less of
it appeax to remain, which greatly amazes me. He
answered, Hearken. This great tree which covers the
plains and the mountains, and all the earth, is the law
of God, published throughout the whole world. Now
this law is the Son of God, who is preached to all the
ends of the earth. The people that stand under its
shadow, are those which have heard his preaching, and
believed. The great and venerable angel which you
saw, was Michael, who has the power over this people,
and governs them. For he has planted the law in the
hearts of those who have believed : and therefore he
visits them to whom he has given the law, to see if
they have kept it. And he examines every one's rod ;
and of those, many that are weakened : for those rods
are the law of the Lord. Then he discerns all those
who have not kept the law, knowing the place of every
one of them. I said unto him. Sir, why did he send
away some to the tower, and left others here to you ?
He replied. Those who have transgressed the law which
they received from him, are left in my power, that
they may repent of their sins: but they who fulfilled
the law and kept it, are under his power. But who
then, said I, are those who went into the tower crown-
ed? He replied. All such as have striven with the
devil, and have overcome him, are crowned : and they are
those who have suffered hard things, that they might
keep the law. But they who gave up their rods green,
and with young branches, but without fruit, have in-
deed endured trouble for the same law, but have not
suffered death; neither have they denied their holy
law. They who delivered up their rods green as they
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received them, are those who were modest and just,
and have lived with a very pure mind, and kept the
commandments of God. The rest thou shalt know,
when I shall have considered those rods which I have
planted and watered. After a few days we returned, '
and in the same place stood that glorious angel, and I
stood by him. Then he said unto me, Gird thyseli
with a towel, and serve me. And I girded myself
with a clean towel, which was made of coarse cloth.
And when he saw me girded, and ready to minister
unto him, he said, Call those men whose rods have
been planted, every one in his order as they gave
them. And he brought me into the field, and I called
them all, and they all stood ready in their several
ranks. Then he said unto them, Let every one pluck
up his rod, and bring it unto me. And first they de-
livered theirs, whose rods had been dry and rotten.
And those whose rods still continued so he command-
ed to stand apart. Then they came whose rods had
been dry, but not rotten. Some of these delivered
in their rods green ; others dry and rotten, as if they
had been touched by the moth. Those who gave
them up green, he commanded to stand apart; but
those whose rods were dry and rotten, he caused to
stand with the first sort. Then came they whose rods
had been half dry, and cleft : many of these gave up
their rods green, and uncleft. Others delivered them
up green with branches, and fruit upon the branches,
like unto theirs who went crowned into the tower.
Others delivered them up dry, but not rotten : and
some gave them as they were before, half dry, and
cleft. Every one of these he ordered to stand apart ;
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some by themselves, others in their respective ranks.
Then came they whose rods had been green, but cleft.
These delivered their rods altogether green, and stood
in their own order. And the shepherd rejoiced at
these, because they were all changed, and free from
their clefts. Then they gave in their rods, who had
them half green and half dry. Of these some were
found wholly green, others half dry; others grqpn
with young shoots. And all these were sent away,
every one to his proper rank. Then they gave up
their rods, who had them before two parts green, and
the third dry. Many of these gave in their rods green ;
many half dry ; the rest dry, but not rotten. So these
were sent away, each to his proper place. Then came
they who had before their rods two parts dry and the
third green ; many of these delivered up their rods
half dry ; others dry and rotten ; others half dry and
cleft ; but few green. And all these were set every
one in his own rank. Then they reached in their rods,
in which there was before but a little green, and the
rest dry. Thoir rods were for the most part found
green, having little boughs, with fruit upon them ;
and the rest altogether green. And the shepherd up-
on sight of these rejoiced exceedingly, because he had
found them thus : and they also went to their proper
orders. Now after he had examined all their rods, he
said unto me, I told thee that this tree loved life ; thou
seest how many have repented, and attained unto sal-
vation. Sir, said I, I see it. That thou mightest
know, saith he, that the goodness and mercy of the
Lord is great, and to be had in honor ; who gave his
spirit to them that were found worthy of repentance.
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I answered, Sir, why then did not all of them repent ?
He replied^ Those whose minds the Lord foresaw
would be pure, and that they would serve him with
all their hearts, to them he gave repentance. But for
those whose deceit and wickedness he beheld, and per-
ceived that they would not truly return unto him, to
them he denied any return unto repentance, lest they
shguld again blaspheme his law with wicked words. I
said unto him. Now, sir, make known unto me, what is
the place of every one of those who have given up
their rods, and what their portion ; that when they
who have not kept their seal entire, but have wasted
the seal which they received, shall hear and believe
these things, they may acknowledge their evil deeds
and repent ; and receiving again their seal from you,
may give glory to God, that he was moved with com-
passion towards them, and sent you to renew their
spirits. Hearken, said he ; They whose rods have been
found dry and rotten, and as it were touched with the
moth, are the deserters and the betrayers of the church.
Who, with the rest of their crimes, have also blasphem-
ed the Lord, and denied his name which had been
called upon them. Therefore all these are dead unto
God ; and thou seest that none of them have repented,
although they have heard my commands which thou
hast delivered unto them. Frona these men therefore
life is far distant. They also who have delivered up
their rods dry, but not rotten, have not been far from
them. For they have been counterfeits, and brought
in evil doctrines ; and have perverted the servants of
God ; but especially those who had sinned ; not suffer-
ing them to return unto repentance, but keeping them
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back by their false doctrines. These therefore have
hope; and thou seest that many of them have re-
pented^ since the time that thou hast laid my com-
mands before them ; and many more will yet repent
but tl^ey that shall not repent, shall lose both repent-
ance and life. But they that have repented, their
place has begun to be witliin the first walls, and some
of them are even gone into the tower. Thou seest
therefore, said he, that in the repentance of sinners
there is life ; but for those that repent not, death is
prepared. Hear now concerning those who gave in
their rods half dry, and full of clefts. They whose
rods were only half dry, are the doubtful ; for they
are neither living nor dead. But they who delivered
in their rods not only half dry, but also full of clefts,
are both doubtful and evil speakers ; who detract from
those that are absent, and have never peace among
themselves, and that envy one another. Howbeit to
these also repentance is ofiered ; for thou seest that
some of these have repented. Now all those of this
kind who have quickly repented, shall have a place in
the tower ; but they who have been more slow in their
repentance, shall dwell within the walls ; but they that
shall not repent, but shall continue on in their wicked
doings, shall die the death. As for those who had
their rods green, but yet cleft, they are such as were
always faithftil and good, but they had some enmity
and strife among themselves concerning dignity and
pre-eminence. Now all such are vain and without un-
derstanding, as contend with one another about these
things. Nevertheless, seeing they are otherwise good,
if when they shall hear these commands, they shall
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amend themselves, and shall at my persuasion suddenly
repent; they shall at last dwell in the tower^ as they
who have truly and worthily repented. But if any one
shall again return to his dissension, he shall be shut
out from the tower, and shall lose his life. Fqr the
life of those who keep the commandments of the
Lord, consists in doing what they are commanded;
not in principality, or in any other dignity. For
by forbearance and humility of mind, men shall
attain unto life ; but by seditions, and contempt of the
law, they shall purchase death unto themselves. They
who in their rods had half dry and half green, are
those who are engaged in many affairs of the world ;
and are not joined to the saints ; for which cause half
of them liveth, and half is dead. Wherefore many
of these, since the time that they have heard my com-
mands, have repented and begun to dwell in the tower.
But some of them have wholly fallen away ; to these
there is no more place for repentance. For by reason
of their present interests, they have blasphemed and
denied God ; and for this wickedness they have lost
life. And of these many are still in doubt ; these may
yet return ; and if they shall quickly repent, they shall
have a place in the tower ; but if they shall be more
slow, they shall dwell without the walls ; but if they
shall not repent they shall die. As for those who had
two parts of their rods green, and the third dry ; they
have by manifold ways denied the Lord. Of these
many have repented, and found a place in the tower ;
and many have altogether departed from God. These
have utterly lost life. And some, being in a doubtful
state, have raised up dissensions : these may yet return,
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if they shall suddenly repent, and not continue in their
lusts ; but if they shall continue in their evil doing
they shall die. They who gave in their rods two parts
dry, and the other green, are those who have indeed
been faithful, but withal rich and full of good things ;
and thereupon have desired to be famous among the
heathen which are without, and have thereby fallen
into great pride, and begun to aim at high matters,
and to forsake the truth : nor were they joined to the
saints, but lived with the heathen ; and this life seemed
the more pleasant to them. Howbeit they have not
departed from God, but continued in the faith ; only
they have not wrought the works of faith. Many
therefore of these have repented ; and begun to dwell
in the tower. Yet others still living among the
heathen people, and being lifted up with their vanities,
have utterly fallen away from God, and followed the
works and wickednesses of the heathen. This kind
of men therefore are reckoned among strangers to
the gospel. Others of these began to be doubtful in
their minds ; despairing, by reason of their wicked do-
ings, ever to attain unto salvation. Others, being thus
made doubtful, did moreover stir up dissensions. To
these therefore, and to those who, by reason of their
doings, are become doubtful, there is still hope of re-
turn ; but they must repent quickly, that their place
may be in the tower. But they that repent not, but
continue still in their pleasures, are nigh unto death.
As for those who gave in their rods green, excepting
their tops, which only were dry, and had clefts, these
were always good, and faithful, and upright before
GodV nevertheless they sinned a little, by reason of
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their empty pleasures and trifling thoughts, which
they had within themselves. Wherefore many of
them, when they heard my words, repented forthwith;
and began to dwell in the tower. Nevertheless some
grew doubtful, and others to their doubtful minds ad-
ded dissensiona To these therefore there is still hope
of return, because they were always good ; but they
shall hardly be moved. As for those, lastly, who gave
in their rods dry, their tops only excepted, which alone
were green ; they are such as have believed indeed in
God, but have lived in wickedness ; yet without de-
parting from God ; having always willingly borne the
name of the Lord ; and readily received into their
houses the servants of God. Wherefore hearing these
things, they returned, and without delay repented, and
lived in all righteousness. And some of them suffered
death; others readily underwent many trials, being
mindful of their evil doings. And when he had ended
his explications of all the rods, he said unto me. Go,
and say unto all men that they repent, and they shall
live unto God : because the Lord, being moved with
great clemency, hath sent me to preach repentance
unto all ; even unto those who, by reason of their evil
doings, deserve not to attain unto salvation. But the
Lord will be patient, and keep the invitation that was
made by his Son. I said unto him. Sir, I hope that
all when they shall hear these things will repent For
I trust that every one acknowledging his crime, and
taking up the fear of the Lord, will return unto repent-
ance. He said unto me, Whosoever shall repent with
all their hearts, and cleanse themselves from all the
evils that I have before mentioned, and not add any
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THE APOCRYPHAL EPISTLES. 465
thing more to their sins, shall receive from the Lord
the cure of their former iniquities, if they shall not
make any doubt of these commands, and shall live
unto God But they that shall continue to add to
their transgressions, and shall still converse with the
lusts of this present world, shall condemn themselves
unto death. But do thou walk in these commands,
and thou shalt live unto God ; and whosoever shall
walk in these, and exercise them rightly, shall live
unto God. And having showed me all these things,
he said, I will show thee the rest in a few days."
The opinions of the ancients in regard to Hennas
were not settled. Origen on Rom. xvi 14, says, " I
suppose that this Hennas is the author of the little
book called the Shepherd (Pastor), a writing (scrip-
ture) which seems to me highly useful, and it is, as I
suppose, divinely inspired " ; and yet in his homily on
Luke xii. 58, he expresses himself more doubtfully.
The author of the Fragment of Muratori expresses
himself more decidedly as to the author of the Shep-
herd. He says, " Hennas composed the Shepherd
very lately, in our times, in the city of Rome, while
the bishop Pius, his brother, occupied the chair of the
Roman church."
Jerome (Catal. c. 10) writes, "Hermas, whom
the apostle Paul mentions in the epistle to the Ro-
mans (xvi. 14) they assert to be the author of
the book which is called Pastor, and which is even
now publicly read in some of the churches of Greece.
It is truly a useful book, and many of the ancient wri-
ters have taken testimonies from it, but it is almost
unknown among the Latins ; " and yet in another pas-
30
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sage of the same work (c. 20) he seems to reject it
altogether.
TertuUian, in the latter part of his life at least, de-
cidedly rejected it ; and affirms that it was classed by
every council of the churches among the false and
apocryphal books (De Pudic. c. 10 and 20) ; and the
Muratorian Fragment says, *' It should be read, indeed,
but it can never be publicly read in the church, either
among the prophets or the apostles."
The conclusions of Eusebius are given very dis-
tinctly, E. H. iii. 3, and are as foUowa
^^ But as the same apostle in the addresses at the
close of the Epistle to the Romans, has among others
made mention also of Hermas, of whom they say we
have the book called Pastor, it should be observed,
that this too is disputed by some on account of whom
it is not placed among those of acknowledged authority
Qo/MoioYovfieyo$y By othcrs, however, it is judged most
necessary, especially to those who need an elementary
introduction. Hence we know that it has been already
in public use in our churches, and I have also under-
stood by tradition, that some of the most ancient wri-
ters have made use of it."
The passage in Irenaeus respecting Hermas is as fol-
lows:
'' Well has the Scripture spoken which says, First
of all believe that there is one God, who created all
things and ordered all things and made all things from
that which is not." The quotation is from Hermas,
Command i 1, and with reference to this passage Euse-
bius (H. E. V. 8) says in regard to Irenaeus, "And he
not only knew but also admitted the book called Pas-
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THE APOCRYPHAL EPISTLES. 467
tor, in these words, * Well is it said in that work which
declares, First of all believe that there is one God,
who created and arranged all things,' " etc., or transla-
ting Eusebius with literal exactness, " Not only did he
know, but he also receives the writing (Scripture,
ye«vv) of the Shepherd, saying. Wherefore well spake
the Scripture (writing, ye«9?) which says," etc. The
word Scripture (re«9v) was probably then used with
rather more latitude than it is now.
There is certainly no evidence that any of the apos-
tles ever sanctioned the Shepherd of Hennas as of
divine authority, or even knew of the existence of
the book.
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CHAPTER TWELFTH.
THE REVELATION OF ST. JOHN AND THE APOCRYPHAL REV-
ELATIONa
REVELATION OP ST. JOHN, OR THE APOCALYPSE. — INTRO-
DUCTORY REMARKa
The official activity of John extended through a
much longer period than that of any other of the
primitive teachers of Christianity; for he was the
youngest of the apostles, and reached a far more ad-
vanced age than any of his associates
On account of his known character as the personal
favorite and bosom friend of his divine Master, the
celebrity of his writings, the extent of his travels
through Christendom, the great age to which he lived,
his being looked upon by all the churches for a long
period as the only man living who had seen and famil-
liarly conversed with Jesus of Nazareth, and on account
of the number of young men who were prepared for
the Christian ministry under his instruction — on these
accounts, John was more extensively known, and more
highly venerated among the Christian churches of the
first and second century, than any other apostle, unless
Paul should be regarded as an exception.
If then, the Apocalypse is falsely ascribed to John,
we should naturally suppose that it would not have
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been ascribed to him at a very early period ; that very
few, if any, of the writers who lived at and near his
time, would be likely to fall into the mistake ; and that
in a later age, the book would gradually, and in the
face of opposition from the better informed, work its
way into public confidence, as a genuine production
of the beloved disciple.
But the historical fects in the case are directly the
reverse of all these reasonable expectations, which
every one will see to be exactly in the natural course
of events, on the supposition that the book is spurious.
The testimony of the early and contemporary wit-
nesses is unanimous and uncontradicted in favor of the
book. Though well known and extensively used in
the churches, not a breath of suspicion was ever blown
upon its reputation, until nearly one hundred and
fifty years after the death of the apostle to whom it is
ascribed ; and then not confidently, but doubtingly,
not on any critical grounds alleged or pretended, but
solely on account of the supposed difficulty of its in-
terpretation, the bad use which had been made of it,
and a dislike to the doctrines which it was imagined
to contain.
THE MILLENNIAL CONTROVERSY.
The occasion on which the genuineness of the Apoc-
alypse was first called in question, was the following.
About A. D. 230, Nepos, the pious and active bishop
of Arsinoe, in Egypt, adopted the notion of the thou-
sand years personal reign of Christ on earth, familiarly
called the millennium, and published a book entitled,
"Refutation of the Allegorists," in which he amplifies
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THE RBVELATION OF ST. JOHN. 471
this doctrine, advocating it with great zeal, and main-
taining it principally by quotations from the Apoc-
alypse. The book was very popular, and gained many
adherents to the doctrine, and so high did their zeal
run, that the chiliasts (as they were called) or the mil-
lennialists, began to secede from the mother church at
Alexandria, which opposed their notions. After the
death of Nepos, Coracion, the pastor of a country
church, took the lead in propagating the same senti-
ments. Dionysius, the mild and learned bishop of
Alexandria, desiring to put an end to this dispute, and
unwilling to fulminate ecclesiastical thunders, which he
knew could have no other effect than to irritate, with-
out intimidating or subduing, went into the province
of Arsinoe, where the seceders were most numerous,
and proposed an amicable conference. They met him
with their leader, Coracion, at their head, and the book
of Nepos was carefully read, and its arguments ex-
amined. The good bishop Dionysius, with exemplary
patience, spent three days in reasoning with his wan-
dering sheep, quietly listened to every thing they had
to say, answered all their objections ; and by the mild-
ness of his bearing, and the force of his arguments, so
completely satisfied them that they had been in the
wrong, that Coracion, in the name of all the rest,
thanked him for his kindness and his instructions, and
declared that they were all convinced that he was in
the right, and accordingly they cheerftilly renounced
their own opinions, and adopted his. A rare result of
theological controversy ! (Neander's Church History,
Part i. p. 1094 ff in German.)
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THE APOCALYPSE THEN FIRST QUESTIONED.
This took place A- D. 255, and Dionysius, to secure
the victory which he had gained, wrote a work on the
Promises. Notwithstanding his wonderfiil success, the
aflFair had given Dionysius a great deal of trouble, the
whole of which he was disposed to attribute to the in-
fluence of the Apocalypse, and began to doubt wheth-
er a book which he supposed had done so much mis-
chief, could be of divine authority, or at any rate the
production of an apostle. Accordingly, in his work
on the Promises, he expresses himself to the following
effect, namely, "that some before his time had reject-
ed the book, alleging that it was altogether dark, en-
tirely without sense and reason, and ascribed it to the
heretic Cerinthus; that he, however, would not, him-
self, presume to reject it, as many of his christian
brethren held it in high estimation. He acknowledged
that he could not understand the book, yet would not,
on that account, reject it, but would allow that it was
written by a man named John, who was a holy and in-
spired man." " But I would not, (says he) eadly agree
that this was the apostle, the son of Zebedee, and
brother of James, who is the author of the gospel and
general epistles which bear his name. But I conjec-
ture from the general tenor of both, and the form and
complexion of the composition, and the execution of
the whole book, that it is not from him." " That it is
a John that wrote these things, we must believe him,
as he says it; but what John it is, is uncertain." "I
am of opinion, that there were many of the same name
with John the apostle, who, for their love and admira-
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THE REVELATION OF ST
tion of him, adopted the same epithet."
that there are two monuments at Ephesus, and that
each bears the name of John ; and from the sentiments
and expressions (of the two works in question, the
Gospel and Apocalypse) as also from their composition,
it might be very reasonably conjectured that this one
is diflferent from that" — and thus he continues through
several paragraphs — saying nothing directly — denying
nothing positively, but exhibiting great doubt and
perplexity. (Eusebius, Eccl. Hist. Book viL 25).
This was the first open attack ever made on the
genuineness of the Apocalypse ; and it is plain from
the above extracts, that Dionysius could sustain him-
self by no respectable authority, otherwise he would
have produced it; and the "some before himself" to
whom he alludes so generally, were probably those
who had been engaged in the same controversy with
Nepos, and whose minds had received a bias similar to
his own. It is also plain, that he had no historical
ground for his conjectures and suggestions, but that
the testimony was all against him ; that he was not him-
self at all confident in his own opinion ; and that his
wish to get rid of the authority of this book, arose
entirely from his apprehension of its obscurity, and its
influence on the millennial controversy. This contro-
versy continued to prevail through several centuries,
particularly in Asia ; and wherever it prevailed, the
anti-millennialists felt the same anxiety to rid them-
selves of the authority of the Apocalypse. This kept
up the controversy in regard to the book ; and all who
have rejected the book, have been induced to reject
it, not on historical testimony against it, or the want
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of such testimony in its favor, but simply on doctrinal
grounds.
TESTIMONIES TO THE REVELATION OF JOHN.
We introduce these testimonies by a striking pas-
sage from Irenaeus. Irenaeus here seems to say that
the Revelation was seen in the reign of Domitian ; but
this is by no means certain, as the reader will see by
turning back to the remarks on page 187 of this vol-
ume.
The ancients were by no means agreed as to the
time when John saw the Apocalypse, It was fixed to
the reign of Nero, certainly by Theophylact, Hippol-
ytus, Arethas, and the Syrian translator, and probably
also by Clement of Alexandria and Tertullian. Epi-
phanius puts it in the reign of Claudius the predeces-
sor of Nero ; while Eusebius, Jerome and Victorinus
decide for Domitian. Nero Claudius Domitivs or Bom-
itianus was the full name of the persecuting emperor ;
and hence we see how it happened that by different
ancient writers both Claudius and Domitian were put
in the place of Nero. Some of the ablest modem
commentators, as Stuart, Guericke and others, decide
for the time of Nero. Compare, however, Alford's
Greek Testament, Vol. iv. p. 230-36.
Eusebius (E. H. v. 8.) gives the passage of Irenaeus,
(Haer. v. 30) and as here we happily have the work
of Irenaeus himself still extant, we know that the
quotation by Eusebius is faithful and correct, and we
have no reason for a contrary supposition in regard to
any of the passages from ancient authors, quoted by
Eusebius.
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THE REVELATION OF ST. JOHN. 475
*' Since we have promised in the outset of our work
to give extracts occasionally when we refer to the dec-
larations of the ancient presbyters and historians of
the church, in which they have transmitted the tradi-
tions that have descended to us respecting the sacred
Scriptures, among these Irenaeus was one. This is
what this author says in the third book of the work
already mentioned; and in the fifth, he thus descants
on the Revelation" of John and the calculation of anti-
christ's name: "As matters are thus, and the number
is thus found in all the genuine and ancient copies,
and as they who saw John attest, reason itself shows
that the number of the name of the beast is indicated
by the Greek letters which it contains." And a little
further on he speaks of the same John: "We, there-
fore," says he, "do not venture to affirm any thing
with certainty respecting the name of antichrist For
were it necessary that his name should be clearly an-
nounced to the present age, it would have been de-
clared by him who saw the revelation. For it has not
been long since it was seen, but almost in our own
generation, about the end of Domitian's reign." (^f
jofisuapov uQxvs. ) These are what he states respecting
the Revelation. Irenaeus had been well acquainted
with these men who had seen John, for they were his
own teachers. No contrary contemporary testimo:
can be adduced. Could the Apocalypse have been so
soon forged, so soon ascribed to John, so soon have
gained general credence, while John was yet living,
and among his personal friends ? How could Polycarp
and Papias have consulted John as to the reading of a
passage in a work which he never wrote, and which
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was falsely ascribed to him, without detecting its spu-
riousness?
Hermas. The Shepherd of Hennas was probably
written very soon after the Revelation of John, and
being a work of the same kind, contains frequent allu-
sions to it The most obvious difference between the
two books, which must at once strike the mind of
every careful reader is, that John, of the Revelation,
is a good Christian of the apostolic age, writing under
the immediate influence of divine inspiration, while
Hermas, of the Shepherd, is a good Christian of the
same age, or of the age immediately following, writing
without any such special divine influence. Compare
Hennas' Vision iii , with Rev. xxi. 14, iii. 12.
Papiaa and others, " Concerning the divine inspi-
ration of the Apocaljrpse it is not necessary to multi-
ply words, blessed men testifying that it is worthy of
belief Gregory the Theologian, Cyrill, and still ear-
lier Papias, Irenaeus, Hippolytus, and Methodius."
Andreas, Proleg, in Apoc. p. 175.
Justin Martyr. " And a certain man of us whose
name was John, one of the twelve apostles of Christ,
in that revelation of Christ which was exhibited to
him, foretold that the faithful would live a thousand
years in Jerusalem, and after that a universal resurrec-
tion of all men and the final judgment." Rev. xx.
"John wrote the Apocalypse which Justin Martjrr
and Irenaeus interpreted." Jerome, de Vir. ill. c. 9.
"He, (Justin Martyr, )writes also, that even down to
his time, gifts of prophecy shone forth in the church ;
mentions also, the Revelation of John, plainly calling
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THE REVELATION OF ST. JOHN. 477
it the work of the apostle, and records also certain
prophetic declarations, in his discussion with Tryphon."
Euseb. E. H. iv. 18.
Melito. "He wrote two books concerning the pass-
over ^and concerning the Revelation of John."
Euseb. E. H. iv. 26.
"Melito wrote concerning the Devil one book, and
concerning the Revelation of John." Jerome de Vir.
ilL c. 29.
Apollonivs. "He quotes, also, the Revelation of
John as testimony ; and relates, also, that a dead man
Was raised by the divine power, through the same
John, at Ephesus." Euseb, E. H. v. 18.
Churches of Yienne and Lyons. "For he was also
a real disciple of Christ, and followed the Lamb whith-
ersoever he went" Rev. xiv. 4. " Not abashed when
overcome by the miartyrs, but evidently destitute of
all reason, the madness both of the governor and the
people, as of some savage beast, blazed forth so much
the more, to exhibit the same unjust hostility against
us. That the Scriptures might be fulfilled, 'He that
is unjust let him be unjust stilL and he that is right-
eous let him be righteous still.'" Rev. xxii 11.
"But if any one of us, either by letter or in conversa-
tion, called them martyrs, they seriously reproved us.
For they cheerfully yielded the title of martyr to
Christ, the true and faithful martyr, (witness) the first
begotten from the dead, the prince of divine life."
Rev. i 5, iii. 14
Irenaens. "But also John the disciple of the Lord,
seeing in the Apocalypse the sacerdotal and glorious
coming of the kingdom." Haer. iv. 20, Rev. L 12-16.
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"And yet more manifestly concerning the last time,
and concerning the ten kings there, among whom the
empire which now reigns will be divided. John the
disciple of. the Lord signified in the Apocal3rpse, dis-
tinguishing what the ten horns would be which were
seen by Daniel, saying thus it was told to me." Haer.
V. 26. Compare also Eusebius, E. H. v. 3.
Athenagoraa. "And the earth shall give up the
dead which she hath received." Legat p. 39, Rev.
XX. 13.
Theophilua. "And there is extant another book of
Theophilus against the heresy of Hermogenes, in
which he uses the testimonies taken from the Revela-
tion of John." Euseb. E. H. iv. 24
"This Eve was the head and beginning of sin, as
she was seduced by a serpent, through whom the ma-
lignant Devil spoke, who is called the Devil and Satan,
and to this day operates in those who act in his spirit^
and he does not cease to be called the Devil He is
also called Daemon and Dragon." Ad Autol. ii. Rev.
xii. 3-9.
Clement of Aleocandria. "And though he may not
be honored with the first seat on earth, he will be en-
throned on the four and twenty thrones judging the
people, as John says in the Apocalypse." Strom. vL p.
667; Rev. iv. 4, 11, 16.
"And we understand that the Jerusalem from above
will be constructed of several stones ; and we admit
that twelve gates of the heavenly city, assimilated to
precious stones, signify the distinguished grace of the
apostolic voice." Ibid. ii. p. 207, Rev. xxi. 21.
Tertullian. "John in the Apocalypse commands
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THE REVELATION OF BT. JOHN. 479
that those who eat things offered to idols and commit
fornication chould be cast out" DePraesc. c. 33, Rev.
iL 20.
"For also the apostle John in the Apocalypse de-
scribes a sword coming out of the mouth of God, two-
edged, very sharp, which should be understood of tho
Divine Word, two-edged with the two Testaments of
the Law and the Gospel." Adv. Marc. iiL 14.
"We also have the churches brought up by John ;
for although Marcion rejects his Apocalypse, yet the
order of bishops traced to the origin will stand to
John as the author." Ibid. iv. 5.
Gaiu8. Eusebius, R H. iil 28. About the same
time, we have understood, appeared Cerinthus, the
leader of another heresy. Caius, whose words we
quoted above, in "The Disputation" attributed to him,
writes thus respecting him: "But Cerinthus, by
means of revelations which he pretended were written
by a great apostle, also falsely pretended to wonder-
ful things, as if they were showed him by angels, as-
serting, that after the resurrection there would be an
earthly kingdom of Christ, and that the flesh, L e. men,
again inhabiting Jerusalem, would be subject to de-
sires and pleasures. Being also an enemy to the divine
Scriptures, with a view to deceive men, he said that
there would be a space of a thousand years for cele-
brating nuptial festivals." Dionysius also, who ob-
tained the episcopate of Alexandria in our day, in the
second book " On Promises," where he says some things
as if received by ancient tradition, makes mention of
the same man, in these words: "But it is highly
probable that Cerinthus, the same that established the
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heresy that bears his name, designedly aflSxed the name
(of John) to his own forgery. For one of the doc-
trines that he taught was, that Christ would have an
earthly kingdom. And as he was a voluptuary, and
altogether sensual, he conjectured that it would con-
sist in those things that he craved in the gratification
of appetite and lust ; L e. in eating, drinking, and mar-
rying, or in such things whereby he supposed these
sensual pleasures might be presented in more decent
expressions; viz. in festivals, sacrifices, and the slay-
ing of victims." John the apostle once entered a bath
to wash; but ascertaining Cerinthus was within, he
leaped out of the place, and fled from the door, not
enduring to enter under the same roof with him, and
exhorted those with him to do the same, saying, "let
u: flee, lest the bath fall in, as long as Cerinthus, that
enemy of the truth, is within."
The above from Eusebius respecting Caius of Rome
and Dionysius, I have inserted to indicate the reason
why the authority of the Apocalypse was ever ques-
tioned in the ancient church, not because there was
any evidence against it, or any lack of evidence in its
favor, but simply because certain mischievous heretics
had made a bad use of it.
Origen. "And John the son of Zebedee says in
the Apocalypse, And I saw an angel flying through
the midst of heaven having the everlasting gospel to
preach to them that dwell on the earth." Comment,
in Joan, i Rev. xiv. 6, 7.
John himself bears witness in the Apocalypse in
these words : "I John, who also am your brother, and
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THE REVELATION CF ST. JOHN. 481
companion in tribulation, and in the kingdom and pa-
tience of Jesus Christ, was in the isle that is called
Patuios, for the word of God, and for the testimony
of Jesus Christ ; and it appears that he saw the Apoc-
alypse in the island." Comment, in Matth. xvi. Rev.
i. 9. And therefore John rightly an apostle and evan-
gelist, and now on account of the Apocalypse a pro-
phet, described the Word of God in the Apocalypsa
Comment, in Joan.
HippolytuB. "And also concerning the gospel and
Apocalypse according to John." Canon pasch.
" Saint Hippolytus, the martyr bishop, composed a
book concerning dispensation and also an apology
for the Apocalypse and Gospel of John the apostle
and evangelist" Ebed Jesu. Catal. v. 6. Syr. Lardner
iii 99.
"Hippolytus wrote some commentaries on the Scrip-
tures, of which I have found these, in Hexaemeron
de Apocalypse, etc." Jerome de Vir. ill. c. 61.
"For he, being in the island of Patmos, sees the
Apocalypse, in which awful mysteries are unfolded,
and explaining them he teaches othera Tell me now
I pray thee, 0 blessed John, apostle and disciple of
the Lord, what thou didst hear and see concerning
Babylon ^and one of the seven angels came who
had the seven phials," eta De Christo et Anti-
christo, 36.
Dionyslua of Alexandrtcu Eusebius (E. EL. vii 24,.
25) makes a very prolix statement of the opinions of
Dionysius respecting the Apocalypse, but it i& too long
to be inserted here.
By the following statement of EuseJius; respecting
31
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Dionysius, it is evident that he did at first receive the
Apocalypse as a genuine work of the apostle John,
like all the other pastors till his time. (K H. vii. 10).
"Gallus had not held the government quite two
years when he was removed, and Valerian, with his
son Gallienus, succeeded in his place. What Dionysius
has also said respecting him, may be learned from his
epistle to Hermammon, in which he gives the follow-
ing account : * In like manner it was revealed to John,
and there was,' says he, 'a mouth given him, speaking
great things, and blasphemy. And there was given
him power, and forty-two months, but it is wonderful
that both took place in Valeiian, and especially when
we consider the condition of the man before this, how
kind and friendly he was towards the pious." (Rev.
xiii. 5).
Cyprian. De Bon. Pat "God the Father com-
manded that his Son should be worshipped , but in
the Revelation an angel rebuked John wishing to wor-
ship him, and said. See thou do it not, for I am thy
fellow servant and of thy brethren ; worship Jesus the
Lord." Rev. xix. 10.
De Eleemos. " Hear the voice of the Lord in the
Revelation, reproving men of this sort with just re-
bukes." Rev. iii. 17, 18.
Epist. 63. " For the Sacred Scripture in the Apoc-
alypse declares that waters signifies peoples^ Rev.
xvii. 15.
Methodius. Conviv. p. 70. "But John in the Apoc-
alypse, being inspired by Christ, teaches us that the
word, which was made flesh, is also chief Virgin, and
chief Pastor, and chief Prophet" (He here quotes,
Rev. xiv. l-4)i
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THE REVELATION OF ST. JOHN. 483
VictoriniLS of Pettau. De Fabric. MuncL "And
therefore without doubt there are twelve angels of the
day and twelve angels of the night, according to the
number of the hours. There are the twenty-four wit-
nesses of the days and the nights, who are seated be-
fore the throne of God having golden crowns on their
heads, whom in the Apocalypse of John the apostle
and evangelist, he calls elders, because indeed they are
elders both to the other angels and to men." Rev.
iv. 4.
"The open book is the Apocalypse which John
saw." Lardner iv. p. 216.
" John was in the island of Patmos There he
saw the Apocalypse So afterwards he delivered
this same Apocalypse which he had accepted from the
Lord — that is. Thou must again prophecy," etc. Rev.
X. xi. Kirchhofer, p. 322.
Victorinus, bishop of Pettau, was not so well skilled
in Latin as in Greek. Whence his works are great in
meaning, but low in the construction of words. They
are these, Commentaries on Genesis— on the Apoc-
alypse of John — and many others." Jerome, Catal.
Vir. ill. c. 74.
"Of which book (the Apocaljrpse) Victorinus, call-
ed bishop, discussed certain most difficult passages."
Cassiodor. Ju. Div. c. 5.
PampMlus. Apol. pro. Orig. "John says in his
Revelation, The sea gave up the dead which were in
it, and death and hell gave up the dead which were
in them." Rev. xx. 13.
LactarMtis. Epist. p. 42. "His name is known to
none except to himself and His Father, as John teach-
es in the Revelation." (xix. 12).
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Instit viL 10. *'But he who contaminates himself
with vices and crimes and is a slave to voluptuousness,
he, being damned suffers eternal punishment, which
the Divine Scriptures called the second death ; which
is also perpetual and full of the most grievous torments."
Rev. ii. 11, xxi. 8.
Easebim. Demonst. Evan. viii. p. 386. "Whence
he says, the Lion of the tribe of Judah hath prevailed,
and he himself hath opened the seals attached to the
book, as we read in the Apocalypse of John." Rev.
V. 5.
"In this persecution it is handed down by tradition
that the apostle and evangelist John, who was yet
living, in consequence of his testimony to the divine
word, was condemned to dwell in theidand of Patmos.
Irenaeus indeed, in his fifth book against the heretics,
where he speaks of the calculations formed on the
epithet of Antichrist, in the above mentioned Reve-
lation of John, speaks in the following manner respect-
ing him." K H. iii. 18, Rev. xiiL 18.
"About this time also, for aTery short time, arose
the heresy of those called Nicolaitans, of which men-
tion is made in the Revelation of John." E. H. iii. 19,
Rev. ii. 6, etc.
AthanoMvs. " The Holy Scripture pronounces that
the Son eternally co-exists with the Father when it
says. In the beginning was the Word and the Word
was with God and the Word was God. And in the
Apocalypse, These things saith He who is an